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Cedar Hill Cemetery 



Hartford Connecticut 



1863-1903 




Published by 

Cedar Hill Cemetery 

1903 








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Officers of Cedar Hill Cemetery 



PRESIDENT 

JONATHAN B. BUNCE 

VICE-PRESIDENT 

GEORGE G. SUMNER 

SECRETARY AND TREASURER 

WARD W. JACOBS 

SUPERINTENDENT 

ROBERT SCRIVENER 



Directors 



Jonathan B. Bunce 
Francis B. Cooley 
George A. Fairfield 
"Ward W. Jacobs 
Austin C. Dunham 
Pliny Jewell 
George G. Sumner 
Drayton Hillyer 
James B. Moore 
Edwin P. Taylor 
Oland H. Blanchard 



Edward M. Gallaudet 
Henry C. Dwight 
William B. Clark 
Atwood Collins 
Wm. E. A. Bulkeley 
Charles L. Goodwin 
Edward W. Hooker 
Edward D. Robbins 
Francis Parsons 
George W. Beach 
William L. Squire 



Office of the Secretary : — Mechanics Savings Bank, 44 Pearl Street, 
Hartford. Telephone number 1876. Connected by private telephone line 
with the Superintendent's office at Cedar Hill. 



"Kings have no such, couch as thine, 
As the green that folds thy grave." 



Historical and Descriptive Sketch 
of Cedar Hill Cemetery 




HE purpose of Cedar Hill Cemetery is to pro- 
vide a place of sepulture in harmony with the 
promise of rest and peace for the dead, satisfac- 
tory to the most cultivated taste of the living 
and made forever secure as a sacred trust in the 
care of a perpetual corporation. 
This ideal the modern cemetery has sought to realize. It 
can only do so under certain conditions. A tract of land must 
be purchased, having a considerable extent, located near the 
city and convenient of access, but protected from all encroach- 
ments of the future, amid rural surroundings, with proper soil, 
and offering in its natural advantages an opportunity for the 
landscape architect to produce with earth, rock, water, and 
wood those beauties which have ever made nature the temple 
of God. These are essential elements. If, in addition to them, 
the place affords those extensive scenic effects of hill and 
valley which awaken a sense of vastness and sublimity, the 
highest results can be attained. Such a tract of land cannot 
be found in the neighborhood of all cities, and could not be 
secured except through legislative authority which is justified 
by the public benefit. The work of developing it requires 
means. It demands, moreover, a plan carefully considered 
and intelligently, continuously, and patiently pursued through- 
out the course of years which are necessary for its perfection. 
There are trusts also to be fulfilled in providing special care 
of grave markers and monuments, or the perpetual disposal of 
cut flowers upon the resting places of friends, or the like, 
which may be a pleasure to the living and an honor to the 
departed. The experience of the past has proven that all 



6 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

these various ends can only be attained when the place of 
sepulture is committed to a corporation created for the pur- 
pose, and having no other aim than to secure to the lot-owners 
all the benefits which the funds accruing from the sale of lots 
may provide. These are the reasons for the modern cemetery, 
in which the wisdom, taste, and forethought of our age have 
found expression. 

The rural cemetery has been a gradual development and 
has reached a pre-eminence in our American life. The reawak- 
ening of civilization in Europe found customs prevailing which 
were offensive to the sentiments of cultivated people, danger- 
ous to public health, subject to the vicissitudes of time, and 
inadequate to the necessities of interment. The mausoleums 
of the nobility were erected to some extent within their parks, 
where taste could be amply gratified ; but, for the most part, 
the ancient practice of burial in or near Christian churches 
held sway. This, in the beginning, arose out of the erection of 
shrines or temples over the remains of martyrs. A burial 
within sacred walls was harmonious with their faith. It was 
thought also to render the resting place secure in the future. 
The history of many famous cathedrals, such as St. Peter's at 
Rome, Notre Dame at Rouen, and Westminster Abbey at Lon- 
don, has seemed to justify this expectation. Some burial 
places, however, once as highly esteemed, have been swept 
away like that of Iona, " the blessed isle". Interments within 
the parish churchyard could not hope for the perpetual pro- 
tection afforded by a cathedral. As time passed there arose 
the necessity of using the limited area for other generations. 
More especially was this true within the crowded city. Some- 
times even the church, which had other ends to serve, thought 
itself justified in abandoning the graveyard to the habitations 
and business of man. Instances are not unknown where these 
sacred acres were ruthlessly taken from the church. Hence 
there was occasion for a new method which would obviate 
these evils. 

Sanitary reasons also were a great force in urging forward 
this development, especially in large cities. The vast number 
of intramural interments in Paris was thought to be danger- 
ous, especially when contagious diseases were prevalent. In 
1790 the National Assembly of France passed a decree prohib- 



HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE SKETCH 7 

iting all burials within churches in Paris. It was this action 
which led to the establishment of the cemetery of Montmartre, 
the oldest burial ground of modern Paris, and the more famous 
"Cimetiere du Pere Lachaise", consecrated in 1804. Well 
known, however, as this latter cemetery is throughout the 
world as the resting place of many celebrated men and a field 
of costly monumental art, its area is only one hundred and ten 
acres, and it must not be thought to represent the highest idea 
which now prevails among the American people. 

The early settlers of New England made their burials in 
the churchyard. It was the custom they had known in the 
mother country, and which has been nowhere else so well 
maintained as under the English parish system. This was 
soon modified by the relations which the church sustained to 
the town. The result was that all burial places came under 
the jurisdiction and care of the civil authorities. It was a 
natural sequence and spread with the extension of the country, 
so that it became the plan generally received. The only ex- 
ceptions were the family burial places, which may still be seen 
here and there, and a few graveyards owned by ecclesiastical 
bodies. In the small homestead enclosure a valuable idea was 
expressed. The generations were gathered together, and the 
spot was convenient for visitation and care. As the family 
decayed, however, the defect of the plan was evident. The 
homestead passed into other hands who had no interest in the 
dead of former owners. The church graveyard was subject to 
the same changes, especially in cities. Around the sacred 
edifice the activities of men naturally gathered, and business 
made demands for the room which the dead could not defend 
and the living were induced to sell. The placing of cemeteries 
under the civil authorities was, of all, the most unpromising 
system. It was liable to all known evils. The town ofiicers 
had other cares which overshadowed this. Such sentiments 
then prevailed as made the graveyard no pressing concern for 
any one. The consequences were everywhere apparent in 
burial places which had been desecrated, neglected, encroached 
upon, and even swept away by the changes of time. Our 
modern revival of interest in them has been largely due to the 
refined sentiment and practical wisdom which have produced 



8 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

the beautiful rural cemetery. In this the experience of the 
past has finally reached a conclusion, which provides the fam- 
ily with a place of sepulture amid the beauties of nature and 
under perpetual care. 

An early example of such a cemetery, if not the forerunner 
of all, is found in our own State of Connecticut. In 1797 the 
General Assembly, upon the petition of James Hillhouse, Jo- 
seph Drake, and Isaac Mills, granted a charter to the " Propri- 
etors of the New Burying Ground, so called, in New Haven." 
These parties had purchased the year before ten acres of land 
for their purpose, which they thought would be " for the larger 
and better accommodation of families, and by its retired situa- 
tion be better calculated to impress the mind with a solemnity 
becoming the depository of the dead." It is said that " the Hon. 
James Hillhouse, then in the United States Senate, was a 
gentleman of great energy of character, and endowed with a 
love of nature and taste for rural culture rare for his time." 
The sentiments these gentlemen entertained did not become 
general for many years. A few examples, however, were suffi- 
cient to spread them throughout the country. Mount Auburn 
Cemetery, near Boston, was incorporated in 1831. It is said 
to have been the first of any note in this country. Laurel Hill 
Cemetery, Philadelphia, was incorporated in 1836, Greenwood 
Cemetery, New York, in 1838, Spring Grove Cemetery, Cin- 
cinnati, in 1845. Within a few years several States made 
provision for the incorporation of cemetery associations. The 
plan was generally received with the favor which it merited ; 
but its most convincing argument was the beautiful, park-like 
appearance of such burial places, so harmonious with refined 
sentiments. A new interest was awakened in monumental art 
when the care of such works was assured. The civil war also 
frequently turned the minds of the people toward such matters. 
During those years many rural cemeteries were established in 
various parts of the country. 

The first action in the history of the Cedar Hill Cemetery 
was taken in the summer of 1863. A number of prominent 
citizens had for some been interested in the sentiments 

At that time, however, local considerations en- 
ion. The existin 



HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE SKETCH 9 

modations were limited and imperfect. The extension of the 
city northward promised to bring them at no distant day 
within the habitations of the living. As there were then no 
outlying parks the people were tempted to frequent the burial 
grounds more than was desirable, and the street railway fur- 
thered these habits. Vandalism was not unknown, as the 
newspapers of the time testify. Moreover, a decided demand 
had arisen for the proper care of graves. It was said that " a 
neglected burial lot is a stigma upon surviving friends, while a 
lot that is carefully trimmed and attended to reflects credit 
upon the living as well as the dead." Moved by these consid- 
erations, a meeting was called to discuss the subject. It was 
held at the residence of James C. Jackson, M.D., and was 
composed of those most interested, one or more gentlemen 
having been invited from each ecclesiastical society in Hart- 
ford. Mr. William L. Collins was chosen chairman and Dr. 
Jackson clerk. After full discussion, "it was unanimously 
decided that in order to meet the desire prevailing among 
our citizens, the enterprise should be inaugurated as soon as 
practicable." Several gentlemen of ample means guaranteed 
its feasibility. A committee consisting of Dr. Jackson, 
Hiram Bissell, and Jacob Weidenman were accordingly 
appointed to select a location, — "one sufficiently removed 
from the city, possessing suitable soil and the largest number 
of other desirable characteristics, such as variety of surface, 
beauty of landscape, and running water." 

The work of this committee was most important. Several 
locations were suggested and carefully examined. One was 
the territory lying west of the present Spring Grove Cemetery, 
and between it and Vine street, through which Gully Brook 
runs. The soil of this tract was thought to be too clayey and 
wet, and withal the expense of purchase and improvement 
would be too large. Another location considered was the 
property lying along the eastern slope of Blue Hill Bidge to 
the west of the present Keney Bark. The obtainable area was 
found to be too small and costly. It was, moreover, then con- 
sidered " quite inaccessible with the general condition of the 
roads leading to it." A third tract was the farm of the late 
George M. Bartholomew on Bark street, then more heavily 



10 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

wooded than of recent years. The subsoil was found to be 
largely of clay and gravel, and therefore inappropriate. This 
location is now occupied in part by Pope Park, and the growth 
of manufacturing interests in that vicinity has proven the wis- 
dom of its rejection as a proper place for a rural cemetery. 
The location which had most considerations in its favor was 
that finally selected, lying principally within the town of 
Hartford, and extending southward over the line into the 
towns of Wethersfield and Newington. It was situated on the 
southern arm of the ridge which runs through the city, and 
was about three miles from the center. On the east was the 
New Haven turnpike road, and on the west the road to New 
Britain. On the south it was bounded by the Hillhouse road 
climbing westward to the summit of the ridge. It had very 
desirable landscape features, affording opportunity for an in- 
expensive and beautiful future development. There was water 
at hand which could be utilized with great effect. It was the 
natural arboretum of all evergreen trees, more so than any 
tract within convenient access of the city. The soil was exam- 
ined and found to be a coarse, gravelly loam, much better for 
interment purposes than is common in this region. Moreover, 
the tract was sufficiently extensive to provide for the needs of 
many generations, and was without any dangers of encroach- 
ment. For these reasons the committee decided to recommend 
this location as most desirable for a rural cemetery. After 
several meetings held in the autumn of 1863, at which the 
subject received careful consideration, the gentlemen interested 
accepted the committee's choice. 

This decision having been made, a committee was appointed 
to negotiate for the purchase of the desired property. It was 
found to belong to nine different individuals or estates, some 
of whom were unwilling to sell at a reasonable price, or could 
not convey their land on account of entailments. A commit- 
tee was therefore appointed, consisting of Messrs. William R. 
Cone, James G. Patterson, and James C. Jackson, to draft, 
present, and advocate a bill, to be submitted to the Legislature, 
asking for a charter with power to sequestrate such lands as 
could not be otherwise secured for cemetery purposes. This 
measure was brought before the Legislature at its May session 



HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE SKETCH 11 

in 1864, and resulted in the act of incorporation elsewhere 
printed, which was duly accepted. The association was thus 
enabled to obtain a desirable tract of land for its purpose, — at 
present comprising two hundred and sixty-eight acres. It was 
given authority to select its own name, and was constituted a 
corporation with all powers necessary for the perfection of its 
designs and the future management of its property. The plan 
set forth in the act was to organize the corporation with a 
capital stock of fifty thousand dollars, — five hundred shares 
of one hundred dollars each, — to be expended in establishing 
the cemetery ; the several subscriptions to the same to be paid 
back to the stockholders, with interest, when funds should 
accrue for that purpose, leaving the cemetery property to the 
final ownership of the lot-holders under the care of their Board 
of Directors. This provision has now been fully carried out, 
one-half of the par value of the shares having been repaid 
January 1, 1895, and the remaining one-half January 1, 1897. 
The five hundred shares of stock, originally held by seventy-six 
subscribers, have therefore ceased to exist, and the present cor- 
poration is composed of the lot-owners. 

The first meeting of the stockholders was held at the 
American National Bank, June 8, 1865. At this time by-laws 
were adopted and directors were chosen. The corporate title 
selected was Cedar Hill Cemetery, — a name suggested by the 
grove of red cedars which crowns the summit of the western 
ridge. On the 12th of June the directors met and elected 
officers. The enterprise moved forward from this time as 
speedily as the circumstances would admit. The desired lands 
were acquired, and cost about fifty thousand dollars ($50,000). 
A portion of these was purchased at once, so that on the 11th 
of September the Committee on General Plans was authorized 
" to proceed to develop, lay out, and grade the grounds of the 
Cedar Hill Cemetery." The work was begun the next day, 
and was done under the superintendence of Mr. Jacob Weiden- 
man, who entered into the service of the corporation on the 
1st of August. During the seasons of 1865 and 1866 about 
fifty thousand dollars were expended in improvements. The 
needed maps and plans were prepared. The grounds were 
drained, laid out in sections, surrounded by broad and well- 



12 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

built avenues, and much was done toward their ornamentation 
with trees and shrubs. The receiving tomb was also con- 
structed. So far had the work advanced in the summer of 
1866 that on the 16th of July lots were offered to the public. 
Interments were made during that season, the first being on 
the 17th of July. 

The original purpose of the directors was to have the cem- 
etery consecrated for burial uses in 1866, before any interments 
were made. The ceremonies were, however, postponed on 
account of inclement weather from the 26th of September to 
the 9th of October, and from that date for the same reason to 
a more favorable season. The day finally fixed was June 24, 
1868. In the waning afternoon light of a beautiful summer 
day many interested people were gathered about a stand, 
which had been erected near what has since been known as 
Consecration Avenue, to attend upon the services of the occa- 
sion. The president of the corporation, George W. Moore, 
presided, and the exercises were as follows : Invocation Hymn, 
" Summer breezes gently sighing" ; Invocation, Rev. Joseph H. 
Twichell; Historical Address, Rowland Swift; Hymn, "I 
would not live alway"; Reading of Scripture, Rev. J. 
Aspinwall Hodge; Ode, "Beneath this sod"; Oration, Rt. Rev. 
John Williams, D.D. ; Consecration Hymn, "Who shudders 
not his grave to find"; Consecration Prayer, Rev. Edwin P. 
Parker; Hymn, "Shall I fear, O earth, thy bosom"; Benedic- 
tion, Rev. Francis Goodwin. The music of the service was 
rendered by a choir of ladies and gentlemen under the leader- 
ship of Dr. J. G. Barnett. Thus was Cedar Hill Cemetery 
established. The years which have elapsed since its consecra- 
tion have witnessed constant improvements, and the growth of 
trees and shrubs has added greatly to its beauty. The original 
design, however, has been followed in the portion developed, 
which at present comprises, with the extensive ornamental fore- 
ground, one hundred and sixty-five acres of the tract. 

The total cost of improvements and maintenance from the 
inception of the enterprise to November 30, 1902, has been 
$304,509.60, which, with the original cost of the lands, makes 
the total outlay $355,129.17. 

The visitor to Cedar Hill Cemetery approaches it from the 



HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE SKETCH 13 

north through Fairfield Avenue, which follows the height of 
the ridge running through the city of Hartford. This broad 
and sightly avenue has been designated as the parkway con- 
necting Pope and Goodwin parks, thus assuring for it an appro- 
priate treatment. Through it also the electric cars bring 
visitors in twenty minutes from the city hall to the cemetery 
gates. The main gateway is located at the northeast corner 
of the grounds. At this point the avenue is intersected by the 
New Haven turnpike road, which bounds the cemetery on 
the east. Opposite the gates is the main entrance to Goodwin 
Park. This tract of land recently acquired by the city, with 
its peaceful meadows, picturesque watercourse, and giant trees 
which remain of the primitive forest, brings into the fore- 
ground of the eastward view a charming landscape. An 
opportunity is thus afforded also for ornamental treatment on 
both sides of the roadway, mutually beneficial to the park 
and the cemetery. Turning toward the west the visitor faces 
the group of buildings which guard the cemetery entrance. 
On the left is the Northam Memorial Chapel, so situated 
on the height of the slope as to present a dignified appear- 
ance and be convenient of access from the highway upon 
which it fronts and from the cemetery grounds in the rear. 
In the center is the Gallup Memorial Gateway, through 
which the road passes into the main entrance avenue. The 
chapel and gateway, substantially built of granite and in 
harmony with each other, give the entire front an appro- 
priate character and are at the same time suitably arranged 
for their purposes. A detailed description of these buildings 
is given elsewhere. On the right is the Superintendent's 
cottage, planted round about with evergreen trees and with 
ornamental flower beds in its spacious lawn. At present this 
is a frame building, but the design contemplates one more 
substantial and in keeping with the chapel and gateway. It 
is to be hoped that some time in the near future some person 
will be moved to contribute the amount necessary to carry 
out this purpose. 

One who passes through the gateway into the cemetery 
finds himself facing Inway Avenue, which leads across the 
intervale foreground, between picturesque sheets of water to 



14 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

the hills beyond. On both sides tall spruce trees flank the 
approach. The avenue itself lies between rows of overhang- 
ing maples. The roadway to the left is that by which the 
receiving tomb is reached. This structure, south of the chapel 
and near at hand, is well built of quarry stone under the brow 
of the hillside. It is well ventilated and has ample accommo- 
dation for sixty caskets, with a separate apartment for each. 
Modern electrical apparatus connects it with the Superintend- 
ent's quarters and affords perfect protection. An ornamental 
front of granite with a receiving hall has been recently con- 
structed, and this essential feature of the modern cemetery is 
now unsurpassed. A small area is laid out in front of the 
tomb, the trees round about making it a secluded and quiet 
spot. 

The ornamental foreground of the cemetery embraces 
seventy-three acres, and constitutes one of its most attractive 
features. Aside from the beauty of its landscape, it serves a 
useful purpose in facilitating proper drainage of the higher 
slopes and removes the burial lots to a retired distance from 
the entrance and highway. As one follows the inway west- 
ward, a massive stone bridge is crossed which has a width of 
forty feet and is one hundred and twenty feet in length. This 
spans the stream which connects the twin waters of Cedar 
Lake. On either side the lake can be seen through the grow- 
ing shrubbery. Still further on to the left is Llyn Mawr 
Lake, thought to deserve its old British name, meaning " Great 
Lake", because of its extent. It covers eight acres and has a 
depth of about fifteen feet. Although it is entirely artificial 
it lies naturally in the midst of the landscape, and receives its 
waters by a winding brooklet from Lotus Lake, located in the 
extreme southwest of the foreground. These in turn it dis- 
charges into Cedar Lake, through which they pass out of the 
grounds by the natural watercourse. This lake feature of the 
landscape is singularly beautiful, with the clumps of alders 
here and there and the view encompassed about w T ith many 
varieties of trees. The extensive tract thus treated makes the 
impression that one is entering a natural park, which was the 
end desired. 

The portion of the cemetery at present laid out for burial 



HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE SKETCH 15 

purposes contains ninety-two acres. It rises before one at 
the western end of the inway in two ridges, running north 
and south, and is divided into twelve sections by broad ave- 
nues, which climb in all directions over the extensive hill in 
the center of the cemetery. Along each avenue on both sides 
a wide border is reserved by the corporation, giving additional 
breadth and offering an opportunity for plantings here and 
there as may be necessary for the general effect. Each sec- 
tion is laid out on the modern style of landscape architecture, 
without copings, fences, or hedges, which are not allowed to 
inclose any lot. The endless variety of such devices, besides 
the cost of erection and need of constant repairs, would be 
very unsightly and spoil the harmonious effect. They are 
moreover wholly unnecessary, as the boundaries of every lot 
are defined by corner-marks of cast iron, flanged and pointed, 
having the lot number in raised figures on the top. These 
corner-marks, being driven down flush with the ground, are 
no obstacle to the lawn mower. Each lot also is surrounded 
by an open space or grass walk, belonging to the corporation 
and entirely within its control, reserved for such planting or 
ornamentation as may be deemed best for the beauty of the 
whole plot. The sections thus treated have the appearance 
of extensive lawns, with trees and shrubs interspersed among 
family monuments and adding greatly to their advantages. 

The ascent of the first or most easterly slope, called 
"Grand View Ridge", brings the entire cemetery into view. 
The height is in sections one and two, and it sinks away to 
the northward in sections five, six, and seven. On the east, 
beyond Consecration Avenue, which runs along its base, is the 
beautiful slope comprised in sections three and four, looking 
toward the sunrise and melting into the landscape foreground. 
Looking toward the west, another and higher ridge is seen, 
named after its former owner, " Hillhouse Ridge," the height 
of which is in section twelve. In the distance, separated by 
a charming intervale, which nature has planted, is the sunset 
summit, one hundred and seventy-three feet above the ceme- 
tery entrance, crowned with foliage of many shades and 
forming a very desirable background for the view. At first 
the visitor is sensible only of his immediate surroundings. 



1G CEDAR HILL. CEMETERY 

Costly examples of monumental art in granite and marble are 
round about. The advantages which the rural cemetery 
offers for such memorials are clearly manifest. Amid flow- 
ers, shrubs, and trees, many varieties of which are visible, the 
countless shapes of stone in pillar, shaft, and block, are brought 
into harmony, and the extensive greensward is the relieving 
screen upon which their outlines are shown. On all sides, in 
the distance, a panorama circles the vision round as vast as 
the horizon itself. This great advantage of Cedar Hill Cem- 
etery rarely escapes remark. To the northward the gilded 
dome of the capitol building is seen, towering aloft in the 
midst of Hartford's church spires. Beyond and forty miles 
away is the Holyoke mountain range, with the familiar summits 
of Mount Tom and Mount Holyoke. The broad and fertile 
valley of the Connecticut river sweeps away eastward. Here 
and there, amid its rolling sea of meadow and forest, the 
clustered homes of many towns are distinctly visible ; Rocky 
Hill, Wethersfield, Glastonbury, East Hartford, Manchester, 
South Windsor, and Rockville nestling between the eastern 
hills. Farther away and forming the background of a pano- 
rama, gorgeous in the colors of spring or autumn, there is the 
rugged range of hills extending from Eastbury northward to 
Bolton and beyond, with the Somers Mountains in view. The 
scenery westward, though in part hidden behind Sunset Cliff, 
as the wooded height of the cemetery is called, is diversified 
and charming. The eye finds meadow, grove, and mansion 
scattered over an extensive valley, with the Talcott mountain 
range looking down upon it from the west and showing its 
bold outlines against the sky. To the south a portion of 
Mount Lamentation is seen, and the Hanging Hills of Meriden 
are plainly in sight. The well-known landscape architect, 
Adolph Strauch, standing on this ridge years ago and looking 
about on the magnificent scenes, is said to have remarked, " I 
have visited every cemetery of any note, from the St. Law- 
rence to the Rio Grande, and I have never seen the spot that 
has so many advantages as this, or so splendid a landscape/' 
One who has dwelt upon this view will not wonder at such 
enthusiasm. As the eye sweeps the horizon round, searching 
out some well-known spot, fascinated with the distant moun- 



HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE SKETCH 17 

tain peak or dwelling with admiration upon the vast sea of 
green, the mind is impressed by the grandeur of the scene. 
The emotions are quieted by the vast calm of nature. One 
appreciates then the desire of so many cultivated persons to 
rest at last in the midst of the perpetual beauties of earth. 
The soul is comforted with the thought that friends and kin- 
dred have at least found a place of sepulture in harmony with 
their characters and tastes, worthy to contain and fitted to 
protect their memorials. The rural cemetery has for its aim 
the gratification of these refined and natural desires. In the 
keeping of a corporation, which has profits for no one and 
equal benefits for all lot owners, which can receive and carry 
out all desirable trusts in passing years, such hopes are thought 
to be sure of fulfillment. 



Northam Memorial Chapel 



The Northam Memorial Chapel is the most conspicuous 
edifice of the group gathered about the entrance to Cedar Hill 
Cemetery. It stands on a gentle elevation south of the gate- 
way, and fronts toward the highway, with an ornamental 
lawn before it. This chapel is the gift of the late Colonel 
Charles H. Northam of Hartford, who was from the organiza- 
tion of the corporation to his death an interested member of 
its Board of Directors. It is appropriately consecrated in his 
memory. 

Some time before his death Colonel Northam expressed the 
pious wish to a few friends that there might be erected at 
Cedar Hill Cemetery a mortuary chapel, set apart as a Chris- 
tian temple for all proper purposes in connection with the 
burial of the dead. The general design in his mind was very 
much like that subsequently developed by his executors. 
Accordingly he bequeathed in his will the sum of thirty thou- 
sand dollars ($30,000) for this end, directing his executors to 
erect the edifice. The bequest not being sufficient for a build- 
ing according to the design selected, Mrs. Susan E. Northam 
generously increased the sum to forty thousand dollars ($40,000) 
to carry out her husband's wishes in the best possible manner. 
This chapel was not designed as a receiving vault, and can 
never be so used. The donor's aim was to provide the sacred 
and comforting associations of the church for such as assemble 
at the burial of the dead. As expressed in his will, the edifice 
is "to be used for the purpose of holding funeral services 
therein by any and all persons, of any and all religious denomi- 
nations or sects, at all proper times, subject to the reasonable 
rules and regulations made by said Cedar Hill Cemetery Asso- 
ciation concerning the same." To this purpose alone the 
chapel has therefore been devoted. 



NORTHAM MEMORIAL CHAPEL 19 

The erection of the building was begun in the summer of 
18S2, and the corner stone, located at the northeast corner of 
the foundation, was laid with appropriate services on the 31st 
of October the same year. The architect was Mr. George 
Keller of Hartford. On the 12th of November, 1883, the 
work being completed, the chapel was dedicated. The day 
was the anniversary of Colonel Northam's death. The services 
were as follows: Hymn, "Come, let us join our friends above"; 
Reading of Scripture, Psalm xcix, John v: 19-30, and Rev. 
xxi: 1-7; Hymn, "Blest be the tie that binds"; Address, Rev. 
Edwin P. Parker, D.D.; Hymn, "Lo! what a cloud of wit- 
nesses"; Delivery of the Chapel to the Directors of the Ceme- 
tery, Mr. James B. Powell, executor; Acceptance of the 
Chapel, Mr. Rowland Swift, treasurer of the corporation; 
Doxology ; Prayer and Benediction. 

The chapel presents a beautiful and picturesque appearance 
from all points of view. It is designed in the English Gothic 
style, which is particularly suited to the character of the 
building. In its plan it is cruciform, with steep pitched roofs, 
having gables at the east and west ends of the nave, and 
smaller gables at the ends of chancel and transepts. The gray 
rock-faced Westerly granite is relieved by the lighter color of 
the hammered granite dressings, and the dark slate of the 
roofs makes an agreeable contrast with the stone. The bank 
on which the chapel stands slopes gently from east to west, 
giving to the low walls of the chapel an appearance of height 
at the ends, which is further increased by a graceful belfry that 
rises above the western gable and above the chancel and tran- 
sept roofs which group below it. The side walls are pierced 
with narrow triple windows, and the chancel is lighted by a 
beautiful mullioned window, the arched head of which is filled 
with stone tracery. The western gable of the chapel was 
struck by lightning September 11, 1901, but the damage to 
the granite blocks and the interior has since been thoroughly 
repaired. 

The entrance to the chapel is at the east gable, lying just 
outside the cemetery walls. The doorway is arched, and 
enriched with carved columns on each side, and in the spandrel 
of the arch above is carved the head of a sleeping cherub, 



20 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

modeled by the sculptor Bauer. This is a poetic work, and 
beautifully suggests that they for whom the chapel is built 
" are not dead, but sleeping." On either side of the entrance 
are coupled windows lighting a vestibule; a rose window is 
above, and the graceful lines of the cross at the peak of the 
gable, and again at the top of the belfry, form the crowning 
emblems of this Christian memorial. 

At the entrance a large vestibule, the entire width of the 
building, is separated from the body of the chapel by a low 
carved cherry-wood screen, the upper panels of which are filled 
with stained glass of antique pattern. A broad aisle leading 
from this vestibule extends up the middle of the nave, and a 
row of solid-cherry wood pews are on either side. The chan- 
cel is at the extreme west end, and the choir occupies the tran- 
sept on the north, and the robing-room that on the south. 
The chancel and transept arches and the mullioned windows 
have splayed jambs and arches of red Carlisle sandstone, and 
the entire floor of the chapel is paved with very small buff, red, 
and brown tile, laid in a meandering pattern of varying design, 
called in olden times " the labyrinth " or " road to Jerusalem." 
The side walls are faced with red pressed brick from the floor 
up to the level of the window stools, forming a band of color 
entirely around the chapel. The wall surface above this is 
tinted in a light buff color until it meets the paneled cherry- 
wood ceiling, which is divided into bays by three trusses 
which span the nave. 

The whole forms a harmonious setting for the rich stained 
glass of the windows, which shed a softened and religious 
light over all. These are by Cottier & Co., the celebrated 
artist firm of London and New York, and the work is fully 
equal to their enviable reputation. The chancel window, which 
is the most conspicuous and richest in design and color, repre- 
sents the " Kesurrection," with Christ in the center, emerging 
from the tomb, and the Eoman soldiers guarding the entrance 
are represented in the attitudes of awe and astonishment. In 
roundels above are the Angels of the Resurrection holding a 
scroll bearing the legend " I am the Resurrection and the Life," 
and above these is the Holy Spirit descending in the form of a 
dove. In the rose window in the eastern gable, opposite the 



NORTHAM MEMORIAL CHAPEL 21 

chancel, is an angel extending a scroll bearing the words 
"Death is swallowed up in Victory." The coloring of the 
windows is rich, the composition excellent, and has the great 
merit of telling its story at a glance. 

The side windows and the vestibule windows are filled with 
stained glass of a simpler design and in lighter tones, thus 
heightening the effect of the richer and more important win- 
dows in the chancel and western gable. The chancel furni- 
ture is cherry, and the rail and reading desk of polished brass. 
The rich colors of the walls, ceiling, and furniture, the beauti- 
ful pavement, and the glowing colors of " the storied windows 
richly dight," delight the eye and prepare the mind to receive 
the lessons of the solemn occasion, when chastened by sorrow 
and in its most receptive mood. 

The bell in the west gable bears the following inscription : 

" In loving memory of Charles H. Northam. 
Born Dec. 21, 1797. 
Died Nov. 12, 1881." 

This memorial chapel is admirably adapted and located for 
its purpose. The dignity of the exterior is heightened by its 
commanding position, and the spacious interior, rich and beau- 
tiful, is bright and cheerful, fitted to dispel gloomy thoughts 
and at the same time impress the mind with the holiness of 
the place. During the winter season it is kept warmed by a 
furnace in the cellar. At services where the remains are not 
to be immediately interred in the cemetery grounds, the casket 
is lowered, at the proper time, from its place before the altar 
by a mechanical appliance, and the bearers remove it to the 
receiving tomb close at hand. Everything which may seem to 
be inharmonious with the solemnity of the service is thus 
avoided, and the sanctity of the holy place surrounds the 
mourners with its comfort and hopes. 



Gallup Memorial Gateway 



The center of the beautiful group of buildings at the en- 
trance to Cedar Hill Cemetery is filled by the Gallup Memorial 
Gateway. It is built in accordance with the original design, 
which contemplates a gate-lodge for the Superintendent, to 
stand on the north, in harmony with the chapel on the south. 
This third edifice as yet awaits some generous donor, but when 
it is provided the extent of the architectural design will appear 
and the gateway will assume its natural place as an entrance 
guarded on both sides by its more stately neighbors. 

The gateway was the gift of Mrs. Julia A. Gallup of Plain- 
field, Connecticut, who, during the last years of her life, resided 
in Hartford. It was completed during the summer of 1889, 
after the design of Mr. George Keller, and cost twenty-eight 
thousand dollars ($28,000). A low granite wall about thirty 
feet in length connects the gateway with the chapel, and gives 
an imposing breadth to the whole entrance. In the center is 
the main carriage gate, eighteen feet wide. Two smaller gates 
are provided for pedestrians, one on each side. To the south 
is the waiting-room designed for the use of visitors to Cedar 
Hill Cemetery, and at all times kept comfortable for this pur- 
pose. To the north is the office building of the Superintendent, 
where charts, plans, and records relating to the cemetery are 
kept for consultation. The waiting-room, office building, and 
the massive gate-posts and walls of the gateway are all built 
of the same material as the Northam Memorial Chapel, white 
"Westerly granite, so that, although they form an independent 
group, they are in harmony with the whole. The magnificent 
iron gates which fill the main entrance, and the smaller gates 
on either side, are probably the most beautiful specimens of 
wrought-iron work in the country on so large a scale. There 
is no cast work, but the whole is done with the hammer and 



GALLUP MEMORIAL GATEWAY 23 

anvil. When seen at a distance against the horizon or the 
white background of the granite, these gates, with their beau- 
tiful interlacing scrolls, delicate leaves, flowers, and tendrils, 
seem like rich lacework stretched across the openings. The 
waiting-room on the one side of these gates and the office 
building on the other, each present gables to the roadway. 
The gable of the waiting-room is filled with a beautiful memo- 
rial window to Mrs. Gallup, for the waiting-room is designed 
to be especially memorial in its character. The interior is 
paved with rich stone mosaic in different tones of color. A 
wainscot of polished Numidian marble of a beautiful rich red 
color runs around the room. The ceiling, which is arch-shaped 
following the lines of the roof, is lined with white oak wood, 
and the walls between the roof and the marble wainscoting are 
colored to harmonize with the rest. A large open fireplace 
with polished red marble chimney-piece, which reaches from 
floor to ceiling, is placed on the south side of the waiting-room 
and bears on the lintel over the fireplace this inscription : 

In Memory of Mrs. Julia A. Gallup, 

who built this gateway. 

Bokn at Plainfield, 5th June, 1814, 

Died at Plainfield, 3d Nov., 1884. 

The stained glass memorial window is by Cottier & Co., 
of London and New York, and represents " The Ascension." 
It is composed in a simple, bold manner, and executed in very 
rich colors, and at once commands the attention of the spec- 
tator on entering the chamber. The other windows in the 
room are of leaded white glass, and the splayed jambs, arches, 
and window stools are of red Tennessee marble. 

The office building on the opposite side of the roadway is 
treated in a simpler manner, befitting its purpose. A pleasant 
bay window projects toward the front, commanding the lawn 
and roadway, so that the attendant can easily observe any one 
approaching the gates. 

One of the most noticeable features of this entire gateway 
group when it is approached by the visitor, is its admirable 
location as related to the cemetery grounds. Its background 



24 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

of tall spruce trees displays it to advantage. Through it the 
entrance avenue passes into a beautiful vista, sinking away in 
the intervale foreground and rising again in the ascent of the 
ridge, where monuments look out from the abundant foliage. 
The impression made, therefore, is not that of many gateways 
which suggest exclusion and conceal the grounds beyond. It 
stands out, rather, as a beautiful memorial, inviting one to 
enter a vast and charming landscape. 



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Chronological List of the Officers of Cedar 
Hill Cemetery 



1865 — 1903 



PRESIDENTS 

George Beach, 1865 — 1867 Nelson Hollister, 1889 — March 2, 1897 

George W. Moore, 1867— Oct. 20, 1889 Jonathan B. Bunce, 1897 — 

VICE-PRESIDENTS 

William L. Collins, 1865;— Nov. 15, James C.Jackson, 1876— Feb. 7, 1882 

1865 Nelson Hollister, 1882 — 1889 

George W. Moore, 1866 — 1867 Jonathan B. Bunce, 1889 — 1897 

George Beach, 1867 — 1876 George G. Sumner, ,1897 — 

SECRETARIES 

Rowland Swift, 1865 — 1866 Ward W. Jacobs, Oct. 6, 1866 — 

TREASURERS 

Rowland Swift, 1865 — 1885 Ward W. Jacobs, 1885 — 

SUPERINTENDENTS 

Jacob Weidenman, 1865 — 1872 Robert Scrivener, 1883 — 

William Salway, 1874—1883 

DIRECTORS 



George Beach, 1865 — July 16, 1899! 
Marshall Jewell, 1865— Feb. 10, 1883 
George W. Moore, 1865— Oct. 20, 1889 
Gordon W. Burnham, 1865 — 1866 \ 
William L. Collins, 1865— Nov. 15, 

1865 
James C. Jackson, 1865— Feb. 7, 1882 
Jonathan B. Bunce, 1865 — 
Henry A. Perkins, 1865 — 1868 
Charles H. Northam, 1865— Nov. 12, 

1881 
Nelson Hollister, 1865— March 2, 1897 
Daniel Phillips, 1865— May 2, 1903. 



Thomas Belknap, 1865 — 1868 
Samuel Woodruff, 1865 — 1868 
Samuel Coit, 1865—1868, 1870—1878 
Hiram Bissell, 1865 — 1876 
Francis B. Cooley, 1865 — 
Jonathan F. Morris, 1865 — Jan. 30, 

1899 
Albert F. Day, 1865 — 1867 
Edwin Taylor, 1865 — 1868 
James G. Batterson, 1865 — Sept. 18, 

1901 
Richard A. Robbins, 1865 — Feb. 26, 

1895 



26 



CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 



John C. Parsons, 1866— March 11, 1898 
Rowland Swift, 1866 — June 13, 1902 
Erastus Collins, 1867 — April 7, 1880 
Edson Fessenden, 1868— Jan. 4, 1888 
Zeno K. Pease, 1868 — Aug. 23, 1890 
Mark Howard, 1868 — Jan. 24, 1887 
George A. Fairfield, 1868 — 
Gardner P. Barber, 1868— Oct. 7, 1879 
Oliver D. Seymour, 1868 — 1878 
Haynes L. Porter, 1868 — 1872 
Buirdett Loomis, 1870 — 1876 
Ward W. Jacobs, 1872 — 
John Amidon, 1876 — Aug. 11, 1891 
Palmer Southworth, 1876 — Aug. 28, 

1889 
Richard D. Hubbard, 1880 — Feb. 28, 

1884 
Austin C. Dunham, 1880 — 
Asa S. Porter, 1880 — Dec. 8, 1883 



Pliny Jewell, 1883 — 

George G. Sumner, 1884 — 

Drayton Hillyer, 1887 — 

Edwin P. Taylor, 1888 — 

Oland H. Blanchard, 1888 — 

William E. Collins, 1888— May 19, 1893 

Edward M. Gallaudet, 1888 — 

James B. Moore, 1889 — 

Arthur N. Hollister, 1889— Jan. 18, 1897 

Henry C. Dwight, 1890 — 

William B. Clark, 1891 — 

Atwood Collins, 1893 — 

Wm. E. A. Bulkeley, 1898 — 

Charles L. Goodwin, 1898 — 

Edward W. Hooker, 1898 — 

Edward D. Robbins, 1898 — 

Francis Parsons, 1898 — 

George W. Beach, 1899 — 

William L. Squire, 1899 — 



In the above list of officers the annual meeting at which each was elected 
is indicated by the first date, that of retirement by the second. Where the 
latter is an exact date it is that of a death in office. 



Act of Incorporation 

Upon the Petition op Henry A. Perkins, William Hungerford, and 
Others, Praying for An Act of Incorporation, for the Pur- 
pose of Establishing a Cemetery in the Vicinity of 
Hartford, as per Petition on File, Dated 
the Second Day of November, 1863. 



Resolved by this Assembly: 

Section 1. That Henry A. Perkins, William Hungerford, Charles 
Cheney, Austin Dunham, William T. Lee, Jonathan S. Niles, George Beach, 
Calvin Day, Gurdon Trumbull, Albert Day, Marshall Jewell, Pliny Jewell, 
Jr., Stiles D. Sperry, Thomas Belknap, James C. Jackson, and William R. 
Cone, with all other persons who are or shall hereafter become associated 
with them in the manner hereinafter provided, be, and they hereby are, 
with their successors and assigns, made and established a body corporate 
and politic, by the name of the Hartford Cemetery Association, or such 
other name as said corporation may hereafter adopt, for the purpose of pro- 
curing and establishing a burying-ground or place of sepulture, and en- 
closing, improving, adorning, and enlarging the same ; and by that name 
shall be capable in law to take, purchase, and procure all such lands, and to 
such extent as they shall deem necessary for their purposes, and hold the 
same and all other kinds of property, and the same lease, sell, and convey 
for sepulchral purposes and at pleasure ; to sue and be sued in all courts ; to 
have and use a common seal and the same to change and alter at pleasure ; 
to make and carry into effect all such by-laws, rules and regulations as may 
be deemed expedient for the proper management of the affairs of the corpo- 
ration, and generally, to do and cause to be done and executed all such acts 
and things as to them may appertain. 

Section 2. That for the purpose of procuring the said grounds there- 
for, and establishing such burying-grounds or place of sepulture, said 
corporation shall have and possess all and the same powers, to enable them 
to acquire said lands, as are now possessed by communities or associations 
duly formed according to the provisions of the one hundred and ninetieth 
section of the act concerning communities and corporations for the enlarge- 
ment of the limits of a burying-ground or place of sepulture already estab- 
lished, and for the purpose of procuring said lands for such burial-place, 
and enlarging the same, all the provisions of the act entitled, An act in 



28 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

addition to an act concerning communities and corporations, approved 
June 21, 1849, be and the same are hereby extended and made applicable 
to the procuring of lands by this present corporation for their burying- 
ground, and the enlargement of the same, to as full extent as said powers 
and provisions are now applicable to the enlargement of burying-grounds 
or places of sepulture already established by associations or communities 
formed according to the provisions of the said one hundred and ninetieth 
section of said act in this section first mentioned. 

Section 3. The capital stock shall consist of five hundred shares of 
one hundred dollars each, and payable in such way and manner, and at 
such time and times, and either in whole or in part, as the directors of said 
corporation shall require, or the by-laws thereof shall prescribe, to be 
repaid in such way and manner and at such times as shall be provided for 
in said by-laws or ordered by said directors. 

Section 4. The affairs of such corporation shall be managed by a board 
of directors, the number and the term for which they or any part or portion 
of the same shall hold their office to be fixed by the by-laws, and such 
other officers as the by-laws require or the directors shall appoint. 

Section 5. Subscriptions to the capital stock may be made in such 
way and manner, and upon such terms, as the persons named in the first 
section hereof may adopt for the purpose. The first meeting of the sub- 
scribers to said capital stock shall be held at the rooms of the Historical 
Society, in the city of Hartford, on the first Wednesday in July, 1864, at 
two o'clock afternoon, or at such other time after said day, and at such 
place, as any three of the persons named in the first section hereof shall fix 
for that purpose, giving notice thereof over their signatures by a publica- 
tion of such notice in two of the daily newspapers published in said city at 
least three days prior to such meeting, at which said meeting, after the 
adoption of such by-laws as the subscribers to said stock present shall deem 
necessary for the organization and government of said corporation, they 
shall proceed to the organization thereof by the election of a board of 
directors, and may transact such other business as may be brought before 
said meeting. 

Section 6. Each shareholder at said meeting, and until otherwise pro- 
vided by the by-laws, shall be entitled to a number of votes equal to the 
number of shares held by such stockholder, and may vote either in person 
or by proxy. 

Section 7. Every person who shall become and be the owner and 
proprietor of a lot in the burial-ground of said corporation shall be entitled 
to attend and take part in the deliberations of said corporation, and 
allowed to vote and exercise all the rights and privileges of a member of 
said corporation, whenever such person shall have complied with all the 
conditions required for that purpose, and all the requirements of the by- 
laws entitling him to such rights of membership shall have been observed 
and performed. 



ACT OF INCORPORATION 29 

Section 8. All moneys received from the sale of lots or otherwise, or 
the proceeds and income thereof, and all other property of said corporation, 
shall be applied to the appropriate uses and purposes of said association, to 
meet their necessary expenses, and to the improvement and enlargement of 
their cemetery grounds, except such as may be applied to the repayment of 
the capital, which, with the interest, may be repaid at such time or times 
either in whole or in part, and in such way and manner, as the by-laws may 
provide or the directors order; and when so repaid, said shares shall cease, 
and the members of said corporation consist of such persons as are or shall 
become and be owners of lots in said cemetery, and who have and shall 
acquire the rights of membership by reason thereof in the way and manner 
hereinbefore provided. 

Section 9. This act, or any part thereof, may be altered, amended, or 
repealed by the General Assembly. 

Approved July 9, 1864. 



An Act in Alteration op An Act Entitled "An Act Concerning 

Lands"; by General Assembly op Connecticut 

May Session, A. D. 1867. 

Be it enacted by the Senate and Houte of Representatives in General Assembly 

convened : 

Section 1. All grants and deeds of bargain and sale, and other con- 
veyances of land belonging to the Cedar Hill Cemetery, set apart for 
sepulchral purposes, shall be recorded at length in the records of lands in 
the town of Hartford, whether said land may be situated in Hartford or in 
the town of Wethersfield, in Hartford county, and nothing in the 20th 
section of the act of which this is an alteration shall be so construed as to 
require said grants, deeds, or conveyances to be recorded in the town of 
Wethersfield, but in every other respect said deeds, grants, and convey- 
ances shall be recorded according to the provisions of said 20th section. 

Section 2. This act shall take effect from its passage. 

Approved June 6, 1867. 



An Act Providing for the Appointment op Policemen at the 
Cedar Hill Cemetery. 

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly 
convened : 

Section 1. The mayor of the city of Hartford may, from time to time, 
appoint one or more suitable persons, to be designated by the Cedar Hill 



30 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

Cemetery association, to be and act as policemen, upon the grounds and at 
the expense of said association. Such policemen shall hold office during 
the pleasure of the mayor. They shall wear in plain sight a suitable shield, 
marked "Cemetery Police"; shall enforce the rules of the association, and 
may arrest any persons violating, or who shall have violated, said rules ; and 
they shall have within said grounds the power of the police of the city of 
Hartford. 

Section 2. Resistance to such policemen shall be punished in the same 
manner and to the extent as is now provided by law for resistance to 
constables. 

Section 3. The police court of the city of Hartford shall have juris- 
diction of all crimes committed upon the grounds of said association, and 
the breach of the reasonable rules and regulations of said association shall 
be held to be a breach of the public peace. 

Approved, March 11, 1879. 



By-Laws 



Article 1. The name of the Corporation shall be the 
Cedak Hill Cemetery. 

Article 2. The Officers of the Corporation shall consist 
of a president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, and not 
less than ten or more than twenty-five directors. 

Article 3. The annual meeting of the Corporation for 
the choice of directors and the transaction of other business 
shall be held in Hartford on the first Thursday in December 
in each year, at 3 o'clock, p. m., in the city office of the Cor- 
poration, or at such other time or place as may be designated 
by the directors. 

Article 4. The secretary of the Corporation shall give 
notice of the annual meeting by advertisement in some daily 
newspaper published in Hartford, at least three days before 
the meeting. Special meetings may be called at any time 
by the directors, and shall also be called by the president or 
secretary, on the written application of ten lot owners, notice 
of which shall be given in the same manner as for annual 
meetings. 

Article 5. Every lot owner shall be entitled to one vote, 
provided he shall have complied with all the by-laws, rules, 
and regulations of the cemetery, and provided further, that 
no person shall be considered a lot owner within the meaning 
of the seventh section of the act of incorporation by reason 
of having purchased rights for one or more single graves or 
interments in the cemetery grounds. 

Article 6. Not less than five lot owners shall constitute 
a quorum at any meeting of the Corporation. 

Article 7. The directors shall have control and manage- 
ment of the business and affairs of the Corporation ; they shall 
present a report at every annual meeting with full statements 



32 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

of the condition of the Corporation, showing the receipts and 
disbursements for the year, assets, and liabilities. 

Article 8. Special meetings of the directors may be 
called by the president, or in his absence by the Vice-presi- 
dent, or by any two of the directors, notice thereof to be 
given by the secretary. Not less than three shall consti- 
tute a quorum for doing business at any meeting of the 
directors. 

Article 9. The directors at their first meeting' after 
their election, or at some adjourned meeting thereof, shall 
choose a president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, and 
such committees as they shall deem necessary, each and all of 
whom shall hold office until a successor is chosen and qualified. 
And the directors may at any time fill any vacancy which 
may occur among the officers or in their own number. 

Article 10. The directors shall annually appoint from 
their own number an executive and finance committee of 
five who shall have general charge of the business and affairs 
of the Corporation while the board of directors is not in 
session. 

Article 11. The directors shall have power to appoint a 
superintendent of the grounds of the Corporation, and to 
define his duties and powers. They shall also establish rules 
and regulations for the care of and admission to the grounds, 
for the grading of all the grounds, and the planting, trimming, 
and removal of all turf, flowers, shrubs, and trees ; also in 
regard to the sale and price of lots and interments, the care 
and management of lots and burials therein, the use of tombs, 
and general police arrangements. No interment or disinter- 
ment shall be made, or monument, sepulchral memorial, or 
grave marks shall be placed on, or removed from, any lot 
without the approval of the directors under hand of the 
secretary. 

Article 12. The secretary shall also keep a register or 
record of all sales of lots for burial purposes within the 
grounds of the cemetery, which shall show the number and 
size of the lot, the name of the purchaser, the date of the 
sale, the price paid, and such other matters as the directors 
shall require. A map or maps of the cemetery property, 



BY-LAWS 33 

showing accurately the location and size of each lot, the loca- 
tion of all monuments, sepulchral memorials, tombs, and grave 
marks and graves, shall be deposited and shall always remain 
in the secretary's office, and duplicate copies of such map or 
maps shall be deposited in some other secure and accessible 
place, which shall be fixed upon by the directors. 

Article 13. All sales of lots shall be by deed, for which 
a fee not exceeding two dollars and the government stamp 
shall be paid by the purchaser. The deed shall grant to the 
purchaser only the right of interment upon his lot or its use 
for burial purpose for himself and family, his heirs and de- 
visees, and such friends as may be buried therein, without any 
profit, gain, emolument, or advantage whatever to the pur- 
chaser or proprietor, and shall be subject to all the by-laws, 
rules, and regulations of the cemetery. 

No sale or transfer of lots by any purchaser will be al 
lowed or be valid except by reconveyance to the Corporation 
and upon the consent of the directors in writing under the 
hand of the secretary. 

The deeds of lots shall be each signed and acknowledged 
by the president or vice-president, and secretary, who are 
hereby created the agents of the Corporation for this purpose, 
and shall be registered by the secretary before delivery. 

Article 14. A committee of two shall be annually ap- 
pointed by the lot owners to examine and audit the accounts 
of the Corporation. 

Article 15. The by-laws may be altered or amended at 
any annual or special meeting of the Corporation. 



Rules and Regulations 

of 

Cedar Hill Cemetery 



1. When graves are to be opened a permit issued by the 
Registrar of Vital Statistics must, in conformity to law, be 
furnished to the Secretary at his office in the city ; the Secre- 
tary will then issue an order to the Superintendent to open the 
grave. Notice should be given so as to allow as much as eight 
hours of daylight for the work. No interment or disinterment 
will be allowed without such order, and no grave will be or- 
dered opened, or interment made, or tomb opened, on Sunday, 
unless required for public health. A charge of $5.00 is made 
for opening, closing, turfing, and perpetual care of a grave not 
less than four feet long and five feet deep, and $4.00 for all 
under that length. No grave to be less than four feet deep. 
Brick graves laid in cement with flagging at bottom and top 
will be built by the Corporation as per schedule to be obtained 
of the Secretary. Ample time should always be given for this 
work. 

2. The owner of a lot may have erected a proper monu- 
ment or sepulchral memorial, subject to the approval of the 
officers or directors. All slabs, tablets, or headstones less than 
four inches thick shall be laid horizontally; all monumental 
work and grave marks must be on stone and cement founda- 
tions. Granite grave marks in one piece and placed three feet 
in the ground will be permitted ; and if placed at the head of 
the grave should be not more than eighteen inches above the 
ground ; and if at foot of grave not more than six inches above 
the ground. To protect the grounds and especially improved 
lots from injury, all excavations for vaults and all foundations 
must be made by the employes of the Corporation at the ex- 



RULES AND REGULATIONS 35 

pense of the lot owner. Foundations for monuments will be 
built of solid masonry not less than six feet deep and same size 
as the lower base of the monument, and level with the top of 
the ground. Foundations, graves, and grave marks to be not 
less than six inches within the lines of the several lots. 

3. The proprietor of each lot shall furnish, to be erected 
by the Superintendent at his or her expense, such merestones 
or landmarks at the corners of his or her lot as shall be adopted 
by the Corporation. 

4. No fence, hedge, railing, or coping will be allowed to 
enclose a lot. 

5. Proprietors of lots may have planted by employes of 
the Corporation shrubs and plants upon their lots under advice 
and control of the Superintendent ; but the right is reserved 
to remove at any time any shrubs, plants, trees, monuments, or 
inscriptions that are in any way objectionable or injurious. 
All rubbish collected on private lots must be removed to such 
places of deposit as are provided for the purpose. In case of 
failure to do so it will be removed at the expense of the lot 
owner. 

6. All workmen employed in the construction of vaults, 
erection of monuments, or work of any kind, must be subject 
to the control and direction of the Superintendent of the cem- 
etery ; and any workmen failing to conform to this rule will 
not be permitted to afterward work in the cemetery. 

7. Heavy-laden teams will not be allowed to enter the 
cemetery in wet weather, or when in the opinion of the Super- 
intendent the roads are in danger of being injured ; and no 
monumental work or grave marks can be moved on the sections 
on wheels. 

8. No person, whether a lot owner or not, will be allowed 
on the grounds of the cemetery without a permit. 

9. Neither bicycles nor vehicles, moved by hand or artifi- 
cial power, will be allowed on the grounds of the cemetery 
without a special permit. 

10. No person with refreshments will be allowed to pass 
the gates. 

11. No rapid driving will be allowed, and no driving on the 
sections. 



36 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

12. No person with firearms, or with dogs running at large, 
will be permitted to enter any part of the cemetery. 

13. Children will not be admitted unless accompanied by 
guardians. 

14. All persons are prohibited from touching any object 
not their own. 

15. Drivers of carriages employed at funerals will be re- 
quired to remain quietly with their teams during the cere- 
monies. No horse may be left by the driver in the cemetery 
unhitched. 

16. Any person disturbing the quiet and good order of the 
place by noise or other improper conduct, or who shall violate 
any of the foregoing rules, will be compelled instantly to leave 
the cemetery. 

17. No money shall be paid, or gratuity, to any person in 
the employ of the Corporation in reward for any personal at- 
tention. 

18. The gates will be opened at sunrise and closed at sun- 
set, when all persons must leave the cemetery. 

19. The Superintendent is fully empowered, as special 
police, to arrest all who violate any reasonable rule of the 
Corporation. 



Advantages 



The great advantage which the lot owners possess in this 
cemetery over many others in this country is due to the purely 
benevolent character of the enterprise. The Corporation has 
no other end than the improvement, care, and ornamentation 
of these grounds. There are no longer any stockholders, and 
the Corporation consists of the lot owners, who elect the officers 
and are mutually entitled to all benefits. No profits can be 
appropriated to any other than the above purposes, and all 
funds accruing from the sale of lots must be held sacred for the 
same ends. Every lot and grave in the grounds is taken care 
of by the Corporation, without expense to the owner. The 
lawns on all the sections are cut by lawn-mowers as often as 
needful, and persons residing abroad may be assured that their 
lots are receiving the same attention as are the lots of resident 
owners. 

Trust Funds 

The Corporation will gladly receive, invest, and expend the 
income of such funds as lot owners or others may bequeath for 
special purposes, such as the care of monuments or sepulchral 
memorials, ornamentation of lots, and the placing of cut flow- 
ers upon graves on Memorial Day, Easter, or other anniversa- 
ries, reserving only the right to maintain the general harmony 
and beauty of the grounds. 

Records 

The Corporation is provided with the most ample and per- 
fect system for defining the boundaries of each lot and record- 



38 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

ing all interments therein, which will at once answer any 
question of the lot owner. Two sets of working or locating 
plans are kept, — one at the city office and the other at Cedar 
Hill. These show diagrams of each lot on the scale of forty 
feet to the inch, with the exact location of all monumental 
work, and every grave, the latter being marked with the number 
of the interment, running from the foot to the head. A third 
set of plans, eight feet to the inch and perfect in every detail, 
is deposited in a safety vault. A record of lots is kept, giving 
all needed information concerning them, and the same is pro- 
vided with a card index of all lot owners. A complete record 
in duplicate is also kept of all interments, showing the number, 
date, name of deceased, place of nativity, age, sex, condition, 
date and place of death, late residence, occupation, parents or 
kindred, cause of death, time of burial or entombment, section, 
lot, grave, undertaker, receipt of registrar's permit, and issue 
of Superintendent's notification. These particulars are deliv- 
ered to the Superintendent of the cemetery with every order to 
open a grave or deposit a casket in the tomb. All applications 
for information should be made at the city office. 

Lots 

In laying out lots the wants and circumstances of all classes 
have been considered, and in each section there are lots varying 
in size from twenty to one hundred feet square. Large lots are 
prepared to satisfy the demand for a " family burying ground," 
and are adapted to meet the needs of several generations. 
The prices of lots vary according to their size and location. 
A permanent grade is established in each section before the 
lots are offered for sale, which will in no case be changed. 

Purchasing Lots 

All persons desiring to purchase lots should visit the ceme- 
tery, where the Superintendent will be found in attendance 
and give all necessary information. After a selection has been 
made, they should at once bring their certificates to the city 
office and pay for their lots, for which a deed will be given. 



EXPLANATIONS 39 

All deeds, wherever the lot may be located, are recorded in 
the town of Hartford. 

Transfer of Lots 

Attention is called to Article 13 of the By-Laws regarding 
the transfer of lots. This article provides that "no sale or 
transfer of lots by any purchaser will be allowed or be valid 
except by reconveyance to the Corporation and upon the con- 
sent of the directors in writing under the hand of the secretary." 
Under the statute a cemetery lot is not liable to execution, and 
while the directors of the Corporation will not object to the 
proper transfer of lots by original purchasers, they will endeavor 
to have the title inalienable, and render it impossible for heirs- 
at-law, by poverty or cupidity, to part with their inheritance 
and remove the bodies of the original owners. 

Division Lines 

The boundaries of all lots are defined by the records and 
charts, and are indicated on the grounds by corner marks of 
cast-iron, having the lot number in raised figures on the top, 
and firmly set in the earth. No fence, hedge, railing, coping, 
or other device will be allowed to enclose a lot. When there 
are two or more persons interested as owners of a lot, no divi- 
sion lines within the same will be recognized by the Corpora- 
tion, all owners having equal rights of interment in the lot so 



long as there shall be room. 



Tomb 



The receiving tomb, located near the Memorial Chapel, is 
of superior construction, substantial, well-ventilated, and dry, 
and affords ample accommodations. It may be used as occa- 
sion requires, and its use in the winter season is very desirable. 
Thus the committal service in the chapel can be appropriately 
performed and the dangers of the undue exposure of friends 
are avoided. It has not been customary to charge lot owners 
who have requested the use of the tomb for a reasonable length 
of time. All parties wi ] l receive due notice of the proper time 
for final interment. 



40 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

Monuments 

It is necessary in order to protect graves, improved lots, 
and the cemetery grounds from present or future injury that 
all excavations lor vaults and all foundations be made by the 
employes of the Corporation. Foundations for monuments 
will be built of solid masonry, not less than six feet deep, the 
stone being quarried on Cedar Mountain and laid in cement 
grouted. This work is done at the expense of the lot owner, 
the price varying from twenty-five to sixty cents per cubic 
foot according to size. Grave marks will also be set by the 
employes. An estimate of the cost of such work will be fur- 
nished upon application with accompanying particulars. 

Brick Graves 

All brick graves, when desired for interments, will be built 
by experienced masons under the supervision of the employes 
of the Corporation at the expense of the lot owner. The ap- 
proved standard requires that the sides be not less than four 
inches and the ends not less than eight inches in thickness, of 
brick wall laid in cement, with the top and bottom of pointed 
flag. The cost varies according to size. 

Mounds 

In laving out the cemetery it was the intention of the 
directors to prohibit mounds over graves. The plan of record- 
ing the location of graves is so complete that a mound is 
unnecessary to indicate the place of interment, especially when 
a marker is set. The early interments in the cemetery are not 
marked by mounds; subsequently, at the solicitation of lot 
owners, mounds have been permitted, but the directors prefer 
to carry out their original plan of a cemetery on the landscape 
lawn plan, which gives a better general effect. 

Single Graves 

Single graves may be secured at a very moderate cost, sec- 
tions and lots being reserved for this purpose. Such graves 



EXPLANATIONS 41 

receive the same external attention, care, and decoration as the 
other parts of the grounds. 

Bicycles and Automobiles 

The rules of the cemetery provide that " neither bicycles 
nor vehicles moved by hand or artificial power will be allowed 
on the grounds of the cemetery without a special permit." 
Passes are granted to those who are lot owners to enter the 
cemetery with a bicycle or automobile, upon application at the 
city office, and in all cases expire with the last day of the year 
during which they are issued. Another application must be 
made for a renewal. 



Form of Deed 



No. 

Cedar Hill Cemetery, 

A corporation legally constituted by the laws of the State of Connecti- 
cut, in consideration of the sum of Dollars, to them paid by 
of the Town of , County of , and State of 
, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, do hereby grant, 
bargain, sell, and convey to the said , h heirs and assigns forever, 
the following described tract or lot of land, to wit : Lot number in 
Section number , containing superficial feet, being a lot in the 
grounds laid out by said corporation for cemetery purposes, situated partly 
in the Town of Hartford and partly in the Town of Wethersfield, in the 
County of Hartford, in said State of Connecticut. 

To have and to hold said granted premises unto the said and 

to h heirs and assigns forever, as and for a burial place and for 

no other purpose whatever, subject, however, to the rules and regulations 
of said corporation, recorded on the books of said corporation in their office 
in the City of Hartford, and to such changes and alterations in the same as 
may hereafter be lawfully made by said corporation, and recorded in their 
said records. 

In Testimony "Whereof, the said corporation have caused these presents 
to be sealed with their seal, and signed by their President, and counter- 
signed by their Secretary, this day of , A.D. 19 
Signed, sealed, and delivered in presence of 
[ Witnesses] 

President, [l. s.] 



Countersigned, 



Secretary, [l. s.] 



State of Connecticut 
County of Hartford 



M 



Hartford, 



A.D. 19 



Personally appeared , President, and , Secretary of the 

Cedar Hill Cemetery, signers of the foregoing instrument, and ac- 
knowledged the same to be their free act and deed, before me, 

Notary Public. 



FORM OF ORDERS 43 

Form of a Bequest of Money for the Care of Lots 

I hereby give and bequeath to the Cedar Hill Cemetery the sum of 
dollars, to have and to hold the same to the said Cedar Hill Ceme- 
tery and their successors, upon trust, however, to keep the same invested, 
and to apply the income thus arising therefrom, under the direction of the 
Board of Directors, to the repair, preservation, or renewal of any tomb, 
monument, or gravestone or other erection, or for planting and cultivating 
trees, shrubs, flowers, or plants upon, in, or around lot No. , Section 
, in the grounds of said Cemetery. 

Form of Order to Open Grave 

ORIGINAL. No 



Hartford, Conk., 

To the Superintendent, 

CEDAR HILL CEMETERY: 

ORDER TO OPEN GRAVE. 

Name of Deceased, 

Place of Nativity, 

Age, Years, Months, Days. 

Single, Married, or Widowed, Sex, 

Date of Death, 

Place of Death, 

Late Residence, 

Occupation, 

Parents or Kindred, — 

Disease or Cause of Death, - 

Place in Tomb - at o'clock M. 

Interment at o'clock M. 

Section Lot No. Owner, 

Grave feet inches long, inches wide. 

Undertaker, 

Registrar's Permit rec'd- at o'clock M. 

Superintendent notified at o'clock M. 

Opening Grave, $ Secretary. 



44 CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 

Form of Work Order 

[original. ] 
No 

Cedar Hill Cemetery, 

Hartford, Conn., 



Order for work on Let Sec. 

Charge to. _ _ 

Ordered by 

Description of Work. 



I 




List of Lot Owners 



Abbe, Burr R. 
Abell, Mary K. 
Abrams, Alva E. 
Allen, Annie P. 
Allen, Bernard 
Allen, Charles 
Allen, Charles D. 
Allen, Francis B. 
Allen, Frank 8. 
Allen, Frederic 
Allen, Isaac G. 
Allen, Jeremiah M. 
Allen, John 
Allen, Mary E. A. 
Allen, Olcott 
Allen, Ripley D. 
Allen, Heirs of Robert 
Allen, William G. 
Allyn, Abel 
Allyn, Timothy C. 
Alton, Charles D. 
Am. Asylum, Hartford 
Amidon, John 
Anderson, Jonas 
Andrews, Elizabeth W. 
Andrews, Jane C. 
Andrews, Prudence C. 
Andrews, Mrs. Sarah P. 
Andrews, Sidney 
Andrus, Mary S. 
Arthur, Louisa 
Atkins, Charles A. 
Atkins, Charles A., Jr. 
Atwood, Henry S. 
Atwood, Herman W. 
Austine, William 
Avery, George W. 

Bacon, Leona E. 
Bacon, Leonard H. 
Bacon, Lyman M. 
Bacon, Marcus Morton 
Bacon, Martha H. 
Baker, Isaiah, Jr. 
Baker, Heirs of Jane E. 
Balch, Lucy 
Balch, Thomas 
Ball, Ellen V. 



Lot Section 
51 III 



51 

167 

60 

170 

180 

60 

48 

50 

100 

26 

60 

42 

5 

44 
180 
126 
15 
97 
27 
76 
93 
77 
61 
32 
59 
226 
164 
22 
86 
11 
31 
77 
96 
96 
45 
94 

130 
33 
91 

82 
194 
119 

34 
208 

98 

18 



V 

V 

III 

VII 
V 

III 

VI 

VI 

VII 

VI 

III 
II 

V 

II 

V 
VI 

II 
I 

II 

III 

I 

I 

VII 

rv 

IV 
VII 

v 

VI 

v 

VI 

IV 

III 

IV 
IV 
IV 

I 

VII 

II 
rv 
in 

VII 
IV 
VI 
VI 
V 
VI 



Baney, John A. 
Barber, Gardner P. 
Barber, James 
Barber, Mark 
Barbour, Annie Gray 
Barbour, Joseph L. 
Barbour, Heirs of Lucius 
Barker, Habiliah 
Barnard, Cecelia 
Barnard, Eliza 

Barnard, Miss Elizabeth A. 232 
Barnard, Ellen S. 
Barnard, Henry 
Barnard, Howard R. 
Barnard, Kenneth P. 
Barnard, Lavinia 
Barnard, William H. 
Barrows, Ashbel W. 
Barrows, Ellen A. 
Barrows, Janet R. 
Barrows, Walter D. 
Bartlett, Edwin S. 
Bartlett, Lucius W. 
Bartliff , Emma F. 
Basey, Mary A. 
Batterson, James G. 
Batterson, Mary A. 
Baxter, William G. 
Beach, Cyprian N. 
Beach, Heirs of George 
Beadle, Harry A. 
Beardslee, Heirs of B. 
Beardsley, Edward W. 
Beckwith, Charles 
Beckwith, Clara M. 
Bed worth, William 
Belden, Caroline B. 
Belden, Clarence A. 
Belden, John M. 
Belden, Mary S. 
Belden, Seth 
Bennett, Fannie W. G. 
Bennett, Joseph A. 
Benton, Henry A. 
Berry, Fred D. 
Berry, Samuel H. 
Berry, Thomas R. 
Best, George 



Lot 


Section 


47 


VI 


17 


II 


120 


IV 


120 


IV 


149 


V 


77 


V 


14 


XI 


195 


V 


61 


III 


30 


III 


.232 


VI 


30 


III 


41 


IV 


41 


IV 


41 


IV 


61 


III 


181 


V 


55 


II 


56 


III 


134 


VI 


244 


VII 


102 


IV 


212 


VII 


257 


VII 


49 


VII 


12 


X 


75 


IV 


172 


V 


54 


II 


1 


II 


59 


VII 


67 


V 


60 


II 


7 


III 


4 


X 


178 


VII 


7 


VII 


53 


III 


34 


ni 


26 


XI 


63 


I 


9 


X 


103 


VII 


239 


VII 


44 


VI 


44 


VI 


44 


VI 


52 


V 



46 



CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 



Bigelow, Charles E. 
Bigelow, Mary 
Bigelow, Heirs of Richard 
Bigelow, Sarah A. 
Billings, Charles E. 
Billings, Henry- 
Billings, Henry E. 
Birdsall, Harriet A. 
Birge, Charlotte F. 
Birney, Reginald 
Bissell, Hiram 
Bissell, Sylvester 
Bissell, Thomas II. 
Blair, Horatio P. 
Blanchard, Homer 
Blanchard, Newell W. 
Blanchard, Oland H. 
Bliss, Benjamin 
Bliss, John W. 
Bliss, Mary T. 
Bliss, Watson H. 
Blodgett, Roswell 
Blumenthal, Albert J. 
Boardman, Charles 
Boardman, Charles H. 
Boardman, Chauncey B. 
Boardman, George W. 
Boardman, John S. 
Boardman, William 
Bolles, Mrs. Adda R. 
Bolles, Sarah A. 
Bone, John 
Bonner, David 
Bonner, John D. 
Booth, Maud J. 
Botsford, Henry A. 
Bourn, Heirs of S. 
Boutelle, William 
Boyd, James 
Boyd, Thomas 
Bradley, Isaac 
Brainard, Leverett 
Bramley, John B. 
Brand, Smart 
Brickley, Genevieve 
Bridgman, Federal B. 
Brittou, Georgetta D. 
Brooks, Abel E. 
Broughton, Mrs. Mary 
Brown, Frank S. 
Brown, Frederick S. 
Brown, Henry S. 
Brown, Jennie M. 
Brown, Orlando L. 
Brown, Orrin M. 
Brown, Richard 
Brown, Roswell 
Brown, Thomson & Co. 
Browne, John D. 
Bryant, Charles K. 



Lot 1 


Section 




52 


IV 


Bryant, Willard M. 


52 


IV 


Buck, Gilbert Percy 


19 


V 


Buck, Miss Susan 


52 


IV 


Buckland, William 


108 


IV 


Budge, Jesse C. 


88 


V 


Bulkley, Clarendon C. 


92 


IV 


Bulkeley, Eliphalet A. 


156 


VI 


Bulkeley, Frank 


75 


VII 


Bulkeley, Lydia S. 


43 


VI 


Bullock, Mrs. Matilda M. 


28 


I 


Bunce, Francis M. 


28 


I 


Bunce, Jonathan B. 


42 


VI 


Bunce, Marianna B. 


1 


V 


Bundy, Horace L. 


5 


III 


Burdett, Charles L. 


25 


II 


Burdick, Frank E. 


25 


II 


Burdick, Russell M. 


3 


XI 


Burke, Albert L. 


59 


II 


Burke, Heirs of T. F. 


123 


V 


Burkett, Ralph 


109 


IV 


Burnet, James G. 


13 


II 


Burnham, Heirs of Geo. 


127 


V 


Burnham, Gordon W. 


96 


VI 


Burnham, John H. 


13 


IV 


Burns, James F. 


13 


IV 


Burr, John B. 


99 


VI 


Burt, Richard S. 


99 


VI 


Burton, Mrs. Jane 


6 


I 


Burton, Heirs of Rev. X. , 


47 


XI 


Bush, Louis 


5 


V 


Bush, Heirs of William 


51 


VI 


Buths, Joseph 


42 


II 


Butler, Heirs of Hez. 


228 


VI 


Butler, John S. 


206 


VI 


Butler, Miss Nettie E. 


33 


IV 


Butler, William E. 


40 


III 




189 


VII 


Cad well, Amasa 


122 


V 


Cad well, Martin 


122 


V 


Cady, Arthur M. 


100 


V 


Cady, Cornelius C. 


16 


I 


Cady, Ernest 


64 


VII 


Calder, John 


166 


VII 


Calhoun, Alexander 


69 


IV 


Calhoun, Lucy A. 


79 


III 


Callahan, Matthew 


138 


VII 


Cameron, Mrs. Harriet 


102 


VII 


Camp, Henry B. 


89 


VII 


Campbell, Mary C. 


103 


I 


Carey, George B. 


62 


I 


Carey, George H. 


19 


XI 


Cargill, Dennis 


19 


XI 


Carlson, Hilda 


10 


V 


Carpenter, Elisha 


174 


VI 


Carpenter, James P. 


90 


VI 


Carpenter, Heirs of M. A. 


35 


II 


Carrier, Heirs of Wm. B. 


106 


VI 


Carson, James 


39 


IV 


Case, Erastus E. 


110 


VII 


Case, Helen R. 



Lot ! 


Section 


205 


VII 


228 


VII 


217 


VI 


46 


V 


53 


VII 


10 


VII 


17 


I 


68 


I 


17 


I 


J.85 


V 


116 


V 


7 


II 


51 


I 


141 


VI 


47 


IV 


150 


VI 


36 


II 


60 


rv 


226 


VI 


9 


i 


111 


VII 


15 


IV 


3 


ii 


48 


in 


46 


ii 


74 


in 


35 


IV 


198 


VII 


J. 10 


IV 


200 


VI 


163 


VI 


190 


VI 


73 


IV 


31 


I 


135 


V 


151 


VI 


74 


IV 


74 


IV 


150 


V 


122 


VI 


32 


XI 


151 


VII 


65 


V 


lul 


I 


10 


VI 


163 


VII 


13 


III 


11 


XI 


173 


VI 


222 


VI 


151 


VI 


217 


VII 


33 


III 


190 


V 


. 17 


VI 


, 34 


V 


44 


IV 


90 


IV 


53 


III 



LIST OF LOT OWNERS 



47 



Case, Julius A. 
Case, Newton 
Caswell, William 
Catlin, Julius 
Caulkins, Alice 
Ckaese, Nora 
Chaffee, John H. 
Chaffee, Julia L. 
Chamberlin, Franklin 
Chamber lin, Henry A. 
Chamberlin, Samuel D. 
Chamberlin, Sarah J. 
Chamberlin, Samuel S. 
Champion, Heirs of A. 
Champlin, Henry B. 
Chapin, Albert D. 
Chapin, Francis A. 
Chapman, Heirs of E. C. 
Chapman, Harriet B. 
Chapman, Henry E. 
Chapman, James L. 
Chapman, Leslie 6. 
Chapman, Sarah 
Charter, William M. 
Chase, George L. 
Chester, John W. 
Child, Thomas 
Church, Abner 
Church, Heirs of C. W. 
Clapp, Samuel F. 
Clark, Heirs of Abel N. 
Clark, David 
Clark, Edna M. 
Clark, Elmer G. 
Clark, George 3d 
Clark, George R. 
Clark, Heirs of Hannah 
Clark, Mrs. Harmony E. 
Clark, Rienzi A. 
Clark, Samuel 
Clark, Walter B. 
Clark, William A. 
Clark, William B. 
Clemons, Henry D. 
Clemons, Lizzie E. 
Clyde, Samuel T. 
Coffin, Marietta O. 
Coit, Samuel 
Cole, Elizabeth H. 
Collins, Heirs of Amos M. 
Colston, Theodore 
Colt, Edward D. 
Colt, Elizabeth H. 
Colt, Elizabeth H. 
Colt, Samuel C. 
Col ton, Charles A. 
Colton, Lester H. 
Conant, George A. 
Conklin, Hamilton W. 
Cook, Asa A. 



Lot 


Section 


78 


V 


6 


XI 


18 


IV 


2 


XI 


85 


VI 


207 


VII 


91 


III 


70 


III 


29 


IV 


100 


V 


11 


IV 


69 


VI 


11 


IV 


26 


I 


193 


V 


45 


VI 


128 


VI 


172 


V 


19 


II 


36 


IV 


41 


II 


96 


V 


56 


I 


21 


V 


23 


XI 


157 


V 


87 


VI 


17 


III 


67 


V 


6 


V 


29 


II 


30 


I 


76 


IV 


1 


IV 


93 


IV 


11 


V 


102 


V 


115 


IV 


54 


V 


104 


VI 


215 


VII 


168 


VII 


29 


II 


88 


VII 


88 


VII 


55 


IV 


185 


VII 


93 


III 


48 


XI 


18 


I 


142 


V 


15 


I 


2 


II 


8 


II 


11 


I 


72 


rv 


105 


VI 


162 


VI 


15 


II 


99 


I 



Cook, Charles W. 
Cook, Miss Kitty S. 
Cook, Mary P. 
Cooley, Francis B. 
Cooley, Henry A. 
Coombs, John 
Cornwall, Horace 
Cornwell, Silas H. 
Corson, Miss Aimee F. 
Corson, William R. C. 
Cowan, Joseph W. 
Cowles, Sarah B. 
Cowles, Sarah E. 
Craig, James E. 
Crane, Samuel L. G. 
Crary, David, Jr. 
Crary, Edwin 
Crego, Charles D. 
Cressy, Alta Starr 
Crittenden, Ralph 
Crosby, Albert H. 
Crosby, Heirs of D. P. 
Crosby, Erastus H. 
Crosby, Kate R. 
Crowell, Albert B. 
Crozier, DeGrey F. 
Cummings, Leonard G. 
Curry, Alexander 
Curtis, Mrs. Ada G. 
Curtis, Harriet 
Cushing, William L. 
Cushman, Nathaniel G. 

Danforth, Mary G. 
Darcy, Mrs. Minnie F. 
Davenport, John S. 
Davis, Clinton B. 
Davis, G. Pierrepont 
Davis, Isaac B. 
Davis, Isaac P. 
Davis, Miss Minnie S. 
Davis, William 
Dawley, Hervey S. 
Day, Albert F. 
Day, Calvin 
Day, Charles G. 
Day, George H. 
Day, Mrs. Welthea T. 
Dayton, Heirs of C. T. 
De Barthe, Mrs. Philena 
Decker, John A. 
Deming, Mary G. 
Dennis, Rodney 
Denison, George E. 
Denison, Marion B. 
Diamond, Levi 
Dickinson, Charles F. 
Dickinson, Henry H. 
Dilliber, Nelson C. 
Dimock, Ira 



Lot 


Section 


13 


V 


152 


V 


75 


I 


6 


II 


185 


VI 


77 


VI 


22 


IV 


72 


VI 


80 


III 


80 


III 


6 


VII 


187 


VI 


18 


VI 


20 


V 


84 


VI 


7 


VI 


64 


III 


215 


VI 


223 


VII 


10 


VII 


129 


VII 


3 


X 


8 


XI 


113 


IV 


18 


III 


201 


VI 


60 


V 


112 


V 


128 


V 


237 


VII 


46 


I 


107 


V 


89 


III 


115 


VII 


57 


IV 


82 


I 


6 


IV 


8 


I 


82 


VI 


42 


VI 


131 


VII 


103 


V 


47 


II 


21 


I 


47 


II 


119 


V 


22 


XI 


158 


V 


66 


VII 


119 


VI 


20 


VI 


5 


IV 


39 


VI 


243 


VII 


203 


VI 


155 


VI 


152 


VI 


145 


VII 


104 


I 



48 



CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 



Lot Section 

Dix, Est. of Charles R. 58 HI 

Dix, Jacob 58 III 

Dix, R. Newton 58 III 

Dix, Timothy E. 12 IV 

Dixon, James 24 I 

Dodge, Gilbert P. 83 VII 

Dodge, Wilbur F. 84 VII 

Donaghue, Edward 68 VI 

Donaghue, Minnie A. 68 VI 

Donley, Mrs. Josephine P. 128 VII 

Donohue, Heirs of Peter 211 VI 

Dow, Irville L. 108 VI 

Dow, Riou D. 182 VI 

Down, John E. 249 VII 

Down, Richard L. 235 VII 

Down, Richard L. 236 VII 

Downing, Mrs. Henrietta 11 X 

Drake, Sidney 12 XII 

Duclos, Mary B. 13 XI 

Duncan, Thomas 85 I 

Dunham, Austin 38 II 

Dunham, Austin C. 38 II 

Earle, John M. 162 V 

Easterby, Charles, Jr. 240 VII 

Easterby, Charles, Sr. 241 VII 

Easterby, Thomas W. 216 VII 

Eaton, Arabelle M. 204 VII 

Eberle, Alexander C. 70 VI 

Eberle, Edward 70 VI 

Eberle, Frederick G. 70 VI 

Eberle, Jacob C. 172 VII 

Eckhardt, Salome A. 197 V 

Eddy, Arthur H. 16 XI 

Edwards, Alonzo 81 VI 

Edwards, C. W. B. 60 V 

Edwards, Edward N. 26 II 

Edwards, Mrs. Jane 103 VI 

Edwards, Porter 165 VI 

Eldridge, Charles W. 26 IV 

Eklridge, Lillie L. H. 43 P7 

Elliott, Harriet M. 5 VII 

Ellis, George 67 III 

Ellis, Theodore G. 90 III 

Ellison, Elizabeth 13 VII 

Ellsworth, Catherine S. 121 VII 

Ellsworth, Julia D. 59 V 

Ellsworth, Oliver 24 D7 

Elmore, Samuel E. 79 I 

Emerson, Irving 116 VII 

Eustis, Francis B. 45 IV 

Evans, Evan 45 III 

Everest, Charles W. 12 III 

Ewing, Mrs. Rachel W. 91 V 

Fairfield, George A. 15 XI 

Fairfield, George A. 15 VII 

Fairfield, John M. 137 VI 

Fanning, William W. 150 VII 

Farmer, Roderick W. 173 VI 



Lot 

Far well, Eliza I. 19 

Farwell, Harriet G. 23 

Fellows, Parker 122 

Felty, John W. 6 

Fenn, Wallace T. 137 

Fenton, Nathan 107 

Fenton, William H. A. 176 

Ferguson, John 192 

Fessenden, Edson 1 

Field, Joseph F. 85 

Fisher, Annie A. 65 

Fisher, Carrie A. 65 

Fisher, George B. 65 

Fisher, Gurdon R. 65 

Fisher, Jane E. 65 

Fisher, Laura A. 65 

Fisher, Thomas L. 65 

Fitch, Albert A. 83 

Fitch, Frederick L. 234 

Flanigan, Angeline L. 245 

Flint, George W. 162 

Fogg, Joseph H. 106 

Foley, Matilda B. 61 

Foley, William R. 61 

Forbes, Louise Jewett 158 

Forbes, Warren L. 158 

Ford, Henry 75 

Forrest, Charles R. 51 

Forrest, Charles R. 90 

Forsythe, Jane 88 

Foster, Frederick R. 10 

Foster, T. Spencer 171 

Fowler, Harry P. 157 

Fox, Henry 63 

Francis, Charles E. 113 

Francis, William 113 

Frayer, Mary E. 80 

French, Martha L. 57 

French, Martha L. 58 

Frisbie, Belle W. 189 

Frisbie, Edward C. 87 

Frisbie, Isaac E. 87 

Fuller, J. Ward 26 

Fussell, Mrs. Clara A. 199 

Gage, Edward L. 107 

Gage, Heirs of Wm. L. 42 

Gallaudet, Sophia 1 

Gallup, David 35 

Galpin, Samuel II. 133 

Garvie, Mary 139 

Garvie, Robert 238 

Geeley, Henrietta M. 19 

Gemmill, John 80 
Giddings, H'rsof EdwinA. 151 
Giddings, Heirs of George 1 

Giddings, Horatio A. 151 
Gilbert, H'rs of Erastus S. 49 

Gilbert, George A. 114 
Gilbert, Mrs. Josephine D. 232 



Section 

I 

III 

IV 
VI 

V 

} vi 

VI 
VII 

III 

VI 

I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
III 

VII 

VII 

V 

VII 

rv 

IV 
VII 
VII 

VI 

i 

i 

i 

x 

VI 

VII 

VII 

V 

V 

VII 

VII 

VII 

V 

V 

V 

II 

VII 

VII 

IV 

III 

I 

V 
VI 
VI 
IV 
VI 

V 
IV 

V 

I 

VII 
VI 



LIST OF LOT OWNERS 



49 





Lot 


Section 


Gillette, Charles S. 


11 


I 


Gillette, H'rs of Harrison A. 1 12 


VI 


Gilrnan, George S. 


45 


II 


Gladwin, Lucretia A. 


157 


VII 


Gladwin, Sidney M. 


105 


IV 


Glazier, Franklin 


20 


II 


Glazier, Heirs of Isaac 


8 


V 


Gleason, Frederick L. 


34 


II 


Goodhue, Mrs. Emma 


186 


VI 


Goodman, Mrs. Annie M. 


53 


I 


Goodnow, Jotham 


110 


V 


Goodrich, Arthur L. 


237 


VI 


Goodrich, Charles C. 


124 


V 


Goodrich, Elizur S. 


100 


IV 


Goodrich, William H. 


31 


II 


Goodwin, Claude E. 


86 


VII 


Goodwin, Heirs of Harvey 181 


VI 


Goodwin, Henry M. 


70 


VII 


Goodwin, James 


1 


X 


Goodwin, Lester H. 


25 


XI 


Goodwin, Mary E. 


65 


IV 


Goodwin, Mrs. Mary E. 


24 


XI 


Gorton, Sarah E. 


103 


V 


Gouge, Henry A. 


43 


V 


Goyt, George 


43 


VII 


Goyt, George 


46 


VII 


Graham, Mary L. 


68 


V 


Gray, Clara B. 


37 


I 


Gray, James 


75 


VI 


Gray, John C. 


154 


VI 


Gray, Louise B. 


144 


VII 


Gray, Mary W. 


37 


I 


Gray, Robert 


116 


VI 


Greeley, Alfred J. 


47 


III 


Green, Elizabeth H. 


122 


VII 


Green, James W. 


143 


V 


Green, Miss Lizzie H. 


60 


VII 


Green, Syrenus 


182 


V 


Green, William H. 


10 


III 


Gridley, Henry R. 


29 


I 


Gridley, Minerva 


102 


I 


Griswold, Hosmer 


44 


V 


Griswold, James B. 


136 


V 


Gross, Charles E. 


7 


XI 


Gross, Cornelia B. 


7 


XI 


Gross, William H. 


7 


XI 


Gubitz, Regina Elizabeth 233 


VII 


Gundry, Charles E. 


179 


VII 


Habenstein, Edward 


164 


VI 


Hale, George L. 


104 


V 


Hall, Fannie E. 


15 


V 


Hall, Fannie P. 


82 


V 


Hall, John H. 


20 


XI 


Hall, Margaret J. 


32 


XI 


Hall, N. Brigham 


38 


VI 


Hamersley, William 


39 


III 


Hamilton, Frank L. 


43 


IV 


Hamilton, Joseph D. 


43 


IV 


Hamilton, Robert W. 


79 


VI 



Hanmer, Caleb J. 
Hap good, Mary Morgan 
Harbison, Alexander 
Harbison, Hugh 
Harbison, John P. 
Harbison, William C. 
Harper, Lydia 
Harrington, Henry E. 
Harris, Heirs of C. 
Harris, Delphia C. 
Harris, Frances 
Harrison, John W. 
Htfd. Typo. Union No. 72, 
Hastings, Mrs. Harriet D. 
Hastings, Panet M. 
Hatch,"Charles E. 
Hatch, George E. 
Hatch, Julia A. 
Hawes, Heirs of Joel 
Hawkins, Walter E. 
Hawksworth, Harry 
Hawley, George B. 
Hawley, Joseph R. 
Hayden, George A. 
Haynes, Charles W. 
Healey, William A. 
Heath, Zoe E. 
Heddrick, Alexander 
Heimgartner, Mary 
Hendee, Lucius J. 
Henke, Francesca A. 
Henney, Jane B. 
Henney, John 
Herzer, Charles 
Heublein, Frederick W. 
Hewins, Matt H. 
Hickmott, Julia A. 
Hicks, Mrs. Julia S. 
Hill, Mrs. Anna B. 
Hillhouse, Heirs of S. P. 
Hills, Angevine A. 
Hills, Charles W. 
Hills, George F. 
Hills, John R. 
Hills, Lucy B. 
Hills, Oscar K. 
Hilly er, Drayton 
Hilton, John 
Hilton, William F. 
Hislop, John 
Hoadly, Charles J. 
Hoadley, Edward J. 
Hoadley, Francis A. 
Hoadley, George E. 
Hogan, Christine B. 
Holbrook, Caleb M. 
Holbrook, George A. 
Holbrook, Roxana 
Holcomb, Harriet E. 
Holehouse, John R. 



Lot 


Section 


58 


III 


91 


I 


47 


I 


47 


I 


47 


I 


47 


I 


99 


V 


145 


V 


1 


XII 


40 


II 


50 


III 


165 


V 


233 


VI 


22 


XI 


34 


IV 


65 


VI 


61 


I 


54 


IV 


56 


II 


227 


VI 


191 


VII 


39 


V 


55 


I 


195 


V 


54 


III 


8 


I 


115 


V 


126 


VII 


167 


VII 


94 


III 


76 


VII 


132 


VI 


106 


V 


51 


IV 


23 


V 


32 


VI 


174 


VII 


82 


VII 


162 


VII 


5 


XII 


68 


IV 


8 


VI 


84 


I 


5 


I 


44 


VII 


117 


IV 


7 


II 


198 


VI 


49 


VI 


115 


VI 


75 


III 


74 


V 


75 


III 


75 


III 


156 


VII 


17 


II 


17 


II 


17 


II 


171 


VII 


193 


VII 



50 



CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 



Hollister, Jane 
Hollister, Nelson 
Hollister, Thomas A. 
Hollister, Whiting H. 
Holman, Maria 
Holt, Lucius H. 
Holt, Heirs of Wm. K. 
Honce, Alfred E. 
Honiss, Thomas A. 
Hooker, John 
Hopkins, Alex. S. 
Houldcroft, David 
House, Anthony S. 
House, Emily J. 
House, James B. 
Howard, Heirs of Amasa 
Howard, Catharine 
Howard, Catharine P. 
Howard, Charles P. 
Howard, Duane R. 
Howard, Frank L. 
Howard, Mark 
Howe, Edmund G. 
Hubbard, Kate G. 
Hubbard, Mary J. 
Hubbard, Mary M. 
Hubbard, Sarah E. 
Hubbard, Sophia A. 
Hubbard, Susan V. 
Hubbard, William D. 
Huebler, Mrs. Dora 
Humes, Ellen E. 
Humes, Emma R. 
Hungerford, Heirs of A. 
Hunt, Mrs. Mary A. 
Hunt, Milo 
Hunter, John S. 
Hunter, Sarah B. 
Huntington, Charles G. 
Huntington, John T. 
Hurd, William S. 
Hurlburt, Abbie E. 
Hussey, Katherine L. 
Hussey, Samuel J. 
Hutchings, Edwin 
Hutchings, William C. 
Huxham, Mrs. Mary 
Hyde, Alvan P. 
Hyde, Arthur S. 
Hyde, E. Henry 
Hyde, Salisbury 

Isham, Norman M. 

Jackson, James C. 
Jackson, James L. 
Jackson, Mrs. Lizzie A. 
Jacobs, Ward W. 
Jarvis, Martha G. 
Jenison, Hampton S. 



Lot 


Section 




Lot 


Section 


98 


VI 


Jenison, Josiah 


42 


V 


4 


II 


Jenkins, William G. 


132 


VII 


147 


V 


Jewell, Marshall, Trustee 


21 


II 


24 


III 


Jewell, Pliny, Trustee 


21 


II 


56 


IV 


Jewett, Frank 


123 


IV 


71 


IV 


Johnson, Andrew 


195 


VI 


83 


IV 


Johnson, Anna C. 


261 


VII 


195 


VII 


Johnson, Annie 


71 


VII 


108 


V 


Johnson, Catherine W. 


89 


I 


20 


IV 


Johnson, Chandler 


60 


II 


19 


VI 


Johnson, Charles F. 


209 


VI 


165 


VII 


Johnson, Joel Walter 


104 


VII 


130 


VII 


Johnson, Heirs of J. W. 


54 


III 


153 


VI 


Johnson, M. Carlyle 


60 


II 


153 


VI 


Johnson, Walter B. 


109 


VII 


145 


VI 


Johnson, Warren 


71 


VII 


10 


II 


Johnston, John 


72 


V 


10 


II 


Johnstone, Christopher S 


. 159 


VI 


10 


II 


Johnstone, Elizabeth A. 


159 


VI 


62 


VII 


Jones, Harriet G. 


33 


I 


10 


II 


Joslyn, Charles M., Adm 


. 30 


XI 


3 


V 








12 


I 


Kappell, George W. 


88 


VI 


11 


XII 


Keeney, Maria M. 


48 


VII 


11 


XII 


Keep, William E. 


151 


V 


11 


XII 


Kelley, Solon C. 


63 


VI 


28 


VI 


Kellogg, Bela C. 


6 


X 


41 


VI 


Kellogg, Edmund B. 


18 


II 


123 


VI 


Kellogg, Elijah C. 


18 


II 


11 


XII 


Kellogg, Hawley 


92 


V 


110 


VI 


Kellogg, Rodney 


40 


V 


192 


V 


Kellogg, Samuel N. 


9 


XI 


192 


V 


Kelsey, William H. 


37 


V 


41 


I 


Kemmerer, Amelia M. 


144 


VI 


117 


VII 


Keney, Henry 


2 


X 


49 


II 


Keney, Walter 


2 


X 


13 


IV 


Kennedy, Henry R. 


134 


VII 


252 


VII 


Kent, Heirs of Albert M. 


101 


VII 


205 


VI 


Kenworthy, John T. 


216 


VI 


77 


IV 


Kenworthy, Thomas 


216 


VI 


42 


I 


Kenyon, Rinaldo P. 


108 


VII 


3 


III 


Kimball, Carlos C. 


4 


V 


173 


VII 


King, Horace H. 


114 


IV 


173 


VII 


King, Sarah L. 


109 


VI 


66 


V 


King, William H. 


202 


VI 


66 


V 


Kinghorn, David 


91 


VII 


90 


V 


Kinghorn, Henry 
Kinghorn, Mrs. Lillias B. 


101 


VI 


26 


IV 


211 


VII 


179 


VI 


Kinney, Mrs. Sara T. 


1 


I 


32 


XI 


Kingsbury, H'rs of Nelson 130 


VI 


179 


VI 


Kline, Heirs of Jane R. 


184 


VI 






Klinger, Bertha H. 


61 


VI 


43 


I 


Knerzer, Frank 


253 


VII 






Knight, Abby Ward 


240 


VI 


52 


II 


Kuous, Caroline B. 


31 


XI 


213 


VII 


Knous, Samuel 


207 


VI 


184 


VII 


Knox, Charles N. 


16 


VI 


63 


II 








4 


III 


Lane, Enos H. 


50 


IV 


42 


V 


Lane, Walter A. 


140 


VI 



LIST OF LOT OWNERS 



51 



Lane, "Willis A. 
Langdon, Ellen J. 
Lanpher, Louis A. 
Laraway, George W. 
Larkum, Georgiana M. 
Larrabee, Anna C. 
Lathrop, Cora K. 
Laurie, Heirs of James 
Lawrence, James 
Lawrence, Juliette H. 
Lawrence, William J. 
Layland, Edmund 
Lay land, William 
Lee, Mrs. Charlotte A. 
Ledger, William L. 
Leitch, Henry 
Lepard, Frederick P. 
Levy, Julius 
Lewis, John B. 
Lewis, Selah 
Lincoln, Charles L. 
Lincoln, Charles P. 
Lincoln, Dwight F. 
Lincoln, Theodore M. 
Lindsley, Clark 
Lloyd, Lila L. 
Lockwood, Augusta V. 
Lockwood, James 
Lockwood, William H. 
Longley, Mrs. Helen I. 
Longley, Thomas E. 
Loomis, George A. 
Loomis, Hiram G. 
Loomis, Mary D. 
Lord, Elizabeth A. 
Lord, Heirs of M. 
Lorenz, William A. 
Love, "William DeLoss 
Loveland, Benjamin W. 
Lyman, Dwight E. 

Maercklein, Herman J. 
Maercklein, Hubert L. 
Main, Emily 
Main, William D. 
Maine, Elizabeth C. 
Marble, Ellen E. 
Marble, Mrs. Olive P. 
Marchant, George 
Marden, Charles W. 
Marsh, Fida B. 
Marshall, Thomas 
Marston, Charles T. 
Marston, Stephen 
Martin, George H. 
Marvel, Harry E. 
Marvin, Cynthia P. 
Masterton, Elizabeth 
Mather, Frank H. 
Mather, George 



Lot 


Section 


90 


VII 


175 


V 


80 


III 


64 


IV 


75 


IV 


159 


V 


179 


V 


18 


V 


168 


V 


65 


I 


168 


V 


201 


VII 


200 


VII 


85 


VII 


40 


VI 


221 


VI 


8 


IV 


64 


III 


236 


VI 


183 


VI 


7 


X 


7 


X 


116 


IV 


7 


X 


41 


III 


47 


VI 


29 


III 


2 


III 


2 


III 


124 


VI 


52 


VII 


194 


V 


32 


III 


64 


I 


190 


VII 


16 


II 


143 


V 


81 


V 


242 


VII 


192 


VI 


147 


VH 


147 


VII 


168 


VI 


213 


VI 


196 


VI 


140 


VI 


221 


VII 


33 


VI 


109 


V 


220 


VII 


101 


V 


105 


I 


105 


I 


206 


VII 


112 


VII 


26 


IV 


116 


VI 


105 


V 


20 


VI 



Mather, Mrs. Lephe 
Mather, Oliver T. 
Mather, Roland 
Mather, Walter S. 
McClunie, Annie E. 
McClunie, J. Alex. 
McCook, Eliza Sheldon 
McCorkle, Henry M. 
McCrone, William 
McDonald, Lilly G. 
McDonald, Margaret L. 
McKee, Nancy 
McKegg, Elizabeth 
McKinney, Hezekiah 
McLean, Heirs of Alex. 
McManus, John T. 
Mead, John C. 
Meggat, William 
Melrose, James, Estate 
Mendsen, Elizabeth S. 
Merriam, Lent B. 
Merrill, Lorenzo D. 
Merriman, Matthew M. 
Mill, Jane E. 
Miller, Archibald 
Miller, Mrs. Elizabeth 
Mills, Heirs of D. A. 
Mills, Sarah E. 
Mineiky, Ellen P. 
Mitchell, Alfred L. 
Mitchell, Donald G. 
Mitchell, Dwight W. 
Mitchell, Harriet A. 
Mitchell, J. Alfred 
Mitchell, Ruby A. 
Mitchell, Walter H. 
Mitchell, William A. 
Mix, Frederick E. 
Mix, John G. 
Moore, George W. 
Moore, Thomas W. 
Moorecroft, Isabella 
Morgan, Edwin D. 
Morgan, George D. 
Morgan, Junius S. 
Morgan, William R. 
Morris, Alfred J. 
Morris, Augusta E. 
Morris, Jonathan F. 
Morse, John P. 
Moseley, David B. 
Moseley, Edwin W. 
Moseley, George W. 
Moyer, Anna 
Munsill, Mrs. Mary J. 
Munyan, Chester G. 
Myers, Harriet W. 
Myers, Harriet W. 
Myers, Rachel Forsythe 
Myers, William W. 



Lot 


Section 


79 


VII 


105 


V 


12 


I 


105 


V 


125 


VI 


125 


VI 


99 


IV 


3 


XII 


85 


V 


255 


VII 


175 


VII 


122 


V 


72 


V 


10 


V 


65 


VII 


51 


V 


95 


IV 


14 


III 


214 


VII 


224 


VI 


11 


IV 


28 


VI 


31 


III 


172 


VI 


110 


VII 


120 


VI 


93 


V 


246 


VII 


275 


VII 


188 


VI 


188 


VI 


62 


V 


74 


VI 


74 


VI 


74 


VI 


74 


VI 


74 


VI 


106 


VII 


39 


I 


48 


II 


71 


V 


63 


IV 


6 


XII 


2 


XII 


1 


XI 


121 


IV 


132 


V 


80 


I 


43 


II 


53 


III 


44 


III 


9 


IV 


9 


IV 


250 


VII 


101 


IV 


125 


V 


54 


VII 


55 


VII 


88 


I 


113 


VI 



52 



CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 



Naedele, Anna L. 
Nevers, George 
Newton, Charles E. 
Newton, George W. 
Newton, Philo S. 
Ney, John M. 
Ney, John M. 
Nichols, Heirs of Cyprian 
Nichols, James 
Noble, Charles S. 
Noble, James 
Northam, Charles H. 
Northam, Chas. H., 2d 
Northam, Robert C. 
Northam, Susan R. 
Norton, Malcolm A. 
Nott, Mary Louise 
Noyes, Mrs. Anna R. 
Noyes, Robert S. 



Oatman, Alva 
Olds, Alfred A. 
Olmsted, Margaret P. 
Ormsbee, Allen I. 
Osborn, Charles C. 
Owen, Sarah 
Owen, Thomas 

Page, Bertrand A. 
Palmer, Amelia A. 
Palmer, Clarence L. 
Pardee, Cora U. 
Pardee, Dwight W. 
Pardee, Sarah N. 
Parker, Edwin Pond 
Parker, Mrs. Emma L. 
Parker, James H. 
Parker, John Dobson 
Parkhurst, Mary J. 
Parks, Heirs of Joseph 
Parmele, Luther 
Parrish, Hamilton 
Parry, William H. 
Parsons, Edward W. 
Parsons, John C. 
Patterson, Caldwell 
Patterson, Charles B. 
Pease, Henry, Jr. 
Pease, Zeno K. 
Peaslee, Charles S. 
Pebbles, Charles E. 
Peck, William H. 
Peckham, George T. 
Pelton, William N. 
Penrose, William Rex 
Pepion, John 
Perkins, Charles E. 
Perkins, Est, Chloe F., 
Perkins, Henry A. 
Perry, Charles D. 



Lot 

123 

218 

16 

166 

22 

75 

42 

71 

37 

104 

104 

37 

11 

138 

37 

174 

56 

164 

7 

51 

199 

16 

52 

50 

123 

123 



229 

117 

160 

43 

5 

43 

32 

199 
11 
59 
87 

130 
81 
28 
58 
27 
44 

126 
47 
23 
24 
33 

111 

57 

9 

3 

258 

121 

46 

dec. 59 

12 

161 



Section 

IV 

VI 

XI 

V 

III 

V 
XI 

I 

IV 
IV 
IV 

II 
I 

V 

II 

V 
VII 

V 
IV 

II 

VI 

III 
II 

V 
VII 

vn 

VII 
VI 
VI 
XI 
XI 
XI 

II 

V 
V 
V 
VI 
V 

I 
III 

V 

I 
I 

VI 
VII 

II 
II 
II 

V 
V 
VI 
IV 
VII 
VI 
IV 

I 
II 

VII 



Lot Section 



Pettibone, Franklin E. 
Pettiboue, William C. 
Phelps, Dexter Stillman 
Phelps, Edward 
Phelps, George H. 
Phillips, Daniel 
Phillips, William J. 
Pierce, Austin D. 
Pike, Lafayette E. 
Pilgard, Cathrina D. 
Pitkin, Albert P. 
Pitkin, Charles A. 
Pitkin, Norman T. 
Plimpton, Linus B. 
Poindexter, Mrs. Belle E 
Pomeroy, Katherine B 
Pomeroy, Noah 
Pomroy, George W. 
Pomroy, Joseph 
Porter, Haynes L. 
Porter, Henrietta 
Post, William H. 
Potter, Harriet A. 
Potter, Lester L. 
Powell, James B. 
Pratt, Ambrose E. 
Pratt, Francis A. 
Pratt, Ruf us N. 
Pratt, Waldo S. 
Prentice, Frank I. 
Prentice, Mrs. Kate B. 
Prescott, Mary E. 
Preston, DeWitt P. 
Preston, Edward V. 
Preston, Selden C. 
Preston, William J. 
Price, Robert 
Prior, Charles Edward 
Purinton, Charles O. 
Putnam, Edwin W. 

Quackenbos, Frank S. 

Ramsden, Heirs of David 
Rand, Louis H. 
Rankin, Adolphus E. 
Rathbun, Julius G. 
Reckard, Henry L. 
Redfield, Maria Thompson 44 
Reynolds, Amos 
Reynolds, Charles R. 
Rhodes, Chauncey 
Rhodes, Henry B. 
Rhodes, Robert H. 
Rice, Charles D. 
Rice, Elizabeth B. 
Rich, John G. 
Rich, Louisa L. 
Richards, Alfred T. 
Richards, William G. 



191 


V 


48 


V 


73 


V 


73 


V 


2 


VII 


5 


II 


57 


II 


4 


VII 


27 


XI 


182 


VII 


4 


XI 


2 


III 


13 


XII 


4 


IV 


188 


VII 


204 


VII 


8 


XI 


129 


VI 


28 


II 


10 


I 


16 


XII 


19 


II 


89 


VI 


178 


V 


37 


II 


40 


VI 


99 


I 


15 


VI 


220 


VI 


129 


V 


129 


V 


186 


VII 


133 


VII 


70 


I 


38 


IV 


98 


VI 


170 


VI 


46 


VI 


58 


IV 


256 


VII 


46 


III 


24 


VI 


210 


VII 


94 


VI 


37 


V 


197 


VII 


i 44 


XI 


12 


VII 


238 


VII 


43 


III 


68 


III 


83 


V 


87 


VII 


61 


V 


92 


III 


92 


III 


140 


V 


57 


III 



LIST OF LOT OWNERS 



53 



Ricker, Emma J. 
Riddell, Mrs. Elizabeth 
Riley, Mary A. 
Risley, Elisha 
Risley, Elisha S. 
Rix, Albert S. 
Robbins, Edward G. 
Robbins, Philemon F. 
Robbins, Richard A. 
Robbins, Mrs. Sarah I. 
Robbins, Silas W. 
Roberts, Alonzo 
Roberts, Ebenezer 
Roberts, George 
Roberts, Ida L. H. 
Robertson, William P. 
Robins, Heirs of Gurdon 
Robinson, Mrs. Eliza T. 
Robinson, George 
Robinson, Henry N. 
Robinson, John S. 
Rodgers, Ann M. 
Rodger s, Sarah Ann 
Rogers, Edward F. 
Rogers, Henrietta S. 
Rogers, Lucy Jane 
Rogers, Theodore B. 
Rogers, William H. 
Rogers, William W. 
Ronald, James T. 
Root, Miss A. Josephine 
Roper, Thomas 
Roulston, Eliza 
Rowley, Lilla A. 
Russ, Mrs. Elizabeth C. 
Russ, Harriet 
Russ, Mrs. Mary 
Russell, Charles H. 
Russell, Frederick W. 
Russell, Gurdon W. 
Russell, Josephine M. 
Russell, Thomas W. 

Sackett, Edward 
Safford, Charles A. 
Sage, Heirs of E. R. 
Sames, Elias 
Samson, Frederic 
Sands, John N 
Sanford, Dwight E. 
Sanford, Dwight E. 
Sargeant, Lois F. 
Saunders, Alfred H. 
Saunders, James H. 
Saunders, Heirs of P. H. 1 
Savage, Elizabeth 
Savage, William W. 
Sawtelle, Alfred W. 
Sawtelle, Caroline 
Sawyer, George O. 



Lot Section 




Lot Section 


135 


VI 


Scheck, Theodore G. 


70 


IV 


227 


VII 


Schutz, Eugene 


219 


VII 


137 


VII 


Scrivener, Robert 


14 


VII 


86 


I 


Searle, Ellen C. 


183 


VII 


173 


VI 


Sears, Harold Carney 


169 


VII 


31 


VI 


Segur, Gideon C. 


225 


VI 


22 


I 


Service, John W. 


227 


VI 


30 


II 


Sexton, Mrs. Emeline M. 


84 


V 


22 


I 


Seymour, Carrie L. 


136 


VII 


45 


VII 


Seymour, Charles B. 


9 


V 


22 


I 


Seymour, Daniel F. 


6 


III 


166 


VI 


Seymour, Dudley S. 


102 


VI 


64 


II 


Seymour, Freeman 


38 


V 


48 


I 


Seymour, Heirs of Horace 50 


II 


43 


IV 


Seymour, Miss Lilla H. 


136 


VII 


9 


VII 


Seymour, Mrs. Mary 


149 


VI 


7 


V 


Seymour Monum't Ass'n 


10 


XII 


107 


IV 


Seymour, Oliver D. 


7 


I 


25 


V 


Seymour, Richard 


14 


V 


91 


I 


Seymour, Spencer H. 


102 


VI 


11 


II 


Seymour, H'rs of Wooster 


197 


VI 


87 


VI 


Seyms, George H. 


41 


V 


87 


VI 


Shannon, Thomas R. 


74 


V 


143 


VI 


Shea, Charles W. 


27 


VI 


26 


III 


Shedd, J. Newton 


80 


IV 


210 


VI 


Shepherd, George R. 


90 


I 


76 


I 


Sherman, Martha T. 


77 


VII 


142 


VI 


Shew, J. Wilson 


49 


III 


124 


VII 


Shew, Jacob W. 


49 


III 


118 


VII 


Shipman, Mary E. 


47 


VI 


91 


V 


Shipman, Nathaniel 


32 


I 


222 


VII 


Shipman, Nathaniel, Ex. 


32 


I 


212 


VI 


Shipman, William D. 


17 


V 


48 


III 


Sill, Louis B. 


73 


VII 


65 


III 


Silloway, Samuel D. 


21 


VI 


38 


I 


Simmons, Byron A. 


59 


III 


65 


III 


Simmons, William G. 


169 


V 


161 


V 


Simonds, Ellen T. 


241 


VI 


14 


II 


Simonds, L. Alice 


148 


VII 


14 


XII 


Simons, William 


164 


VII 


13 


VI 


Sisson, Thomas 


50 


I 


39 


IV 


Skinner, Alfred R. 


16 


IV 






Skinner, John W. 


76 


III 


97 


VI 


Skinner, Julius G. 


29 


VI 


131 


V 


Slate, Dwight 


110 


IV 


36 


V 


Slate, Harriet M. 


188 


VI 


177 


V 


Small, Henry T. 


74 


VII 


178 


VI 


Smith, Dr. Andrew K. 


223 


VI 


83 


VI 


Smith, Andrew T. 


58 


I 


50 


VII 


Smith, Arthur G. 


56 


V 


51 


VII 


Smith, Charles B. 


12 


XI 


22 


II 


Smith, Edgar L. 


159 


VII 


78 


VII 


Smith, Elisha T. 


20 


I 


239 


VI 


Smith, Miss Eliz'h Goodwin 8 


VII 


!. 63 


V 


Smith, Elizur 


141 


V 


101 


I 


Smith, Erastus 


9 


III 


101 


I 


Smith, Francis 


45 


V 


38 


III 


Smith, Frederick Morse 


141 


V 


38 


III 


Smith, George 


46 


V 


63 


III 


Smith, George B. 


30 


III 



54 



CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 



Smith, Henry Howard 
Smith, Henry Martyn 
Smith, James A., Jr. 
Smith, James E. 
Smith, John N. 
Smith, Mary B. 
Smith, Norman 
Smith, Oliver P. 
Smith, Roswell C. 
Smith, Thomas M. 
Smith, Mrs. Vergenia V. 
Smith, Virginia T. 
Smith, Rev. Wilder 
Smith, Willis B. 
Soper, Charles C. 
Soper, Mrs. Harriet E. 
Southworth, Palmer 
Spalding, Samuel 
Spear, David A. 
Spence, Alexander 
Spencer, Edith 
Spencer, Elizabeth 
Spencer, H'rsof Geo. G. 
Spencer, May C. 
Spencer, Uriel 
Spencer, William A. 
Sperry, Mrs. Hermie C. 
Sperry, Henry T. 
Sperry, Stiles D. 
Sponsel, Charles W. 
Sponsel, John A. 
Sprague, Charles W. 
Sprague, George W. 
Squire, William H. 
Squire, William L. 
Squires, Alvin 
Squires, ElishaB. 
Squires, George W. 
Standish, Ira M. 
Stanton, Mrs. Grace A. 
Starkweather, Nathan 
Starr, Burgis P. 
Starr, Heirs of Hannah M. 
Steadman, Mary A. 
Steane, Isaac J. 
Stearns, Henry P. 
Stebbins, Lucius 
Stetson, Charles C. 
Stetson, Horace W. 
Steven, Sarah M. 
Stevens, John C. 
Stevens, John N. B. 
Stevens, H'rs of Jos. H. 
Stevenson, David R. 
Stewart, Caroline B. 
Stewart, Lizzette A. 
Stewart, Timothy B. 
Stillman, Benjamin R. 
Stillman, Henry A. 
Stillman, Peter D. 



Lot 


Section 




Lot 


Section 


147 


VI 


St. John, Howell W. 


4 


XII 


176 


VII 


Stockbridge, Lucy A. 


78 


III 


4 


I 


Stoddard, Jonathan H. 


2 


VII 


126 


V 


Stone, Harriet L. 


204 


VI 


142 


V 


Storrs, Melancthon 


27 


I 


78 


I 


Storrs, Zalmon A. 


21 


IV 


133 


VI 


Stoughton, Dwight G. 


52 


III 


56 


V 


Stover, Harriet C. 


35 


III 


24 


IV 


Strickland, Abel 


22 


VI 


180 


VI 


Strong, David E. 


184 


V 


73 


V 


Strong, Heirs of Eunice C, 


, 53 


IV 


20 


IV 


Strong, Henry L. 


135 


VII 


144 


V 


Strong, Julius L. 


4 


V 


56 


V 


Strong, William H. 


46 


I 


196 


V 


Stuart, Caroline B. 


100 


VI 


71 


III 


Studley, Theodore 


193 


VI 


77 


I 


Sturtevant, Francis C. 


155 


V 


92 


VI 


Sumner, Frank C. 


69 


I 


198 


V 


Sumner, Heirs of H. F. 


35 


V 


118 


VI 


Sutherland, John M. 


27 


VI 


154 


VII 


Swan, Theron C. 


10 


III 


120 


VII 


Swan, Theron C. 


62 


III 


34 


I 


Sweetser, Charles E. 


32 


V 


154 


VII 


Sweetser, Mary E. 


32 


V 


72 


VII 


Swift, Rowland 


9 


II 


69 


V 








218 


VII 


Taft, Ellen C. 


52 


I 


160 


VII 


Taintor, George E. 


146 


V 


62 


II 


Taintor, Henry E. 


146 


V 


70 


IV 


Talcott, Allen B. 


14 


I 


66 


IV 


Talcott, Charles H. 


14 


I 


219 


VI 


Talcott, Edward C. 


14 


I 


111 


VI 


Talcott, George 


42 


I 


17 


IV 


Talcott, James 


45 


I 


17 


IV 


Talcott, John B. 


68 


I 


186 


V 


Talcott, Sarah A. 


67 


I 


186 


V 


Talcott, Sarah Allen 


14 


I 


149 


VII 


Taylor, Edwin P. 


7 


X 


73 


III 


Taylor, Eliza J. 


11 


VII 


164 


V 


Taylor, Harriet T. 


25 


IV 


37 


IV 


Taylor, John H. 


11 


VII 


9 


I 


Taylor, Samuel 


11 


II 


231 


VI 


Terry, Adeline W. 


230 


VI 


40 


I 


Terry, Edmund 


25 


IV 


114 


V 


Terry, Edward C. 


72 


III 


85 


IV 


Terry, Edward W 


25 


IV 


8 


III 


Terry, Frank H. 


25 


IV 


27 


III 


Terry, James 


98 


IV 


27 


III 


Terry, John T. 


25 


IV 


12 


V 


Terry, Lucius H. 


25 


IV 


127 


VII 


Terry, Lucretia 


81 


IV 


23 


IV 


Terry, Roderick 


25 


IV 


118 


V 


Thatcher, Herbert E. 


187 


VII 


234 


VI 


Thomas, Mrs. I. G. 


121 


V 


100 


VI 


Thompson, Charles E. 


180 


V 


111 


IV 


Thompson, Maria D. 


37 


III 


89 


VII 


Thompson, Mary Ann 


55 


V 


97 


IV 


Thompson, William 


55 


V 


92 


I 


Thompson, William, D.D 


. 37 


III 


3 


IV 


Thomson, James M. 


8 


X 



LIST OF LOT OWNERS 



55 





Lot 


Section 




Lot 


Section 


Thresher, William B. 


93 


VI 


Ward, Ann Eliza 


13 


I 


Tiffany, Edwin D. 


11 


I 


Ward, Moses W. 


81 


I 


Tilden, Thomas T. 


56 


IV 


Ward, Samuel S. 


10 


I 


Tillotson, Mrs. Mary S. 


81 


VII 


Warner, Charles Dudley 


81 


III 


Tilton, David 


146 


VI 


Warner, Frederick W. 


54 


I 


Tolhurst, Mary A. 


122 


VI 


Warner, Horace 


42 


III 


Tolhurst, William J. 


108 


V 


Warner, John C. 


54 


I 


Tomlinson, Charles C. 


169 


VI 


Warner, Mary J. 


41 


III 


Toohy, Heirs of Wm. 


120 


V 


Washburn, George C. 


86 


VI 


Toucey, Catherine 


71 


I 


Wasserbach, Eliza 


112 


IV 


Towne, Heirs of L. D. 


27 


IV 


Waterman, Edgar 


160 


V 


Townsend, Wilbur H. 


3 


I 


Waters, Henry 


30 


VI 


Tracy, D. Wallace 


67 


IV 


Waters, Heirs of James 


119 


VII 


Tracy, John F. 


91 


I 


Waters, William C. 


16 


V 


Tracy, Louis A. 


202 


VII 


Webb, Harriet C. 


118 


IV 


Trimble, Alex. B. 


135 


V 


Webb, Myron 


80 


IV 


Trimble, John 


69 


VII 


Webster, Ursula L. 


71 


VI 


Trinity College, Trustees of 19 


III 


Webster, William 


146 


VII 


Trumbull, Hugh 


73 


VI 


Weeks, Emeline 


20 


VI 


Trumbull, James P. 


73 


VI 


Weeks, Henry E. 


41 


III 


Trumbull, Joseph 


73 


VI 


Weeks, William H. 


155 


VII 


Trumbull, Robert J. 


73 


VI 


Weidenman, Jacob 


3 


VII 


Trumbull, William 


73 


VI 


Weller, Robert 


125 


VII 


Tryon, Henry R. 


61 


II 


Weller, Robert, Jr. 


125 


VII 


Tryon, James S. 


139 


V 


Welles, Charles F. 


33 


V 


Tuller, Abbie L. 


158 


VI 


Welles, Edwin P. 


33 


V 


Tuller, Charles D. 


85 


III 


Welles, Hrs. of Francis N. 


161 


VI 


Tuller, Mary E. S. 


158 


VI 


Welles, Gideon 


20 


III 


Tuller, William 


85 


III 


Welles, James G. 


2 


V 


Turner, Charles P. 


33 


II 


Welles, John S. 


23 


I 


Turner, Julia M. 


15 


XII 


Welles, Leonard R. 


33 


V 


Turner, William J. 


209 


VII 


Welles, Leonard T. 


23 


I 


Turner, William W. 


33 


II 


Welles, Oswin 


23 


I 


Tuttle, Edith A. 


105 


V 


Welles, Heirs of Thos. H. 


138 


VI 


Tuttle, Nelson J. 


73 


V 


Wells, Charles T. 


94 


IV 


Tuttle, Samuel I. 


25 


VI 


Wells, Dudley 


28 


IV 


Tuttle, William F. 


5 


X 


Wells, George L. 


1 


XII 


Twitchell, Willis I. 


76 


V 


Wells, John F. 


70 


V 


Tyler, Edwin S. 


54 


II 


Wells, Stephen M. 


28 


IV 


Tyler, Frederick 


54 


II 


Welsh, Emily 


94 


V 


Tyler, George F. 


54 


II 


Welsh, Jane 


94 


V 








Welsh, Mary E. 


94 


V 


Ulrich, Augustus F. 


95 


V 


Welsh, William J. 


94 


V 


Underwood, Judson B. 


165 


VI 


Welton, Henry A. 


100 


I 








Wendell, Lydia B. 


72 


I 


Vail, Thomas J. 


1 


I 


West, Andrew B. 


194 


VI 


Valentine, Eliza W. 


16 


XII 


West, Helen B. 


183 


V 


Valentine, Mary J. 


23 


VI 


Westwood, Mrs. Minnie E. 17 


VII 


Van Name, George E. 


187 


V 


White, Alonzo 


84 


III 


Vermilye, Elizabeth M. 


55 


III 


White, Cornelia A. 


68 


V 


Vermilye, Mary M. 


55 


III 


White, Edward S. 


89 


V 


Very, Julia Sherwood, 


22 


V 


White, J. Woodbridge 


25 


III 


Vibert, Heirs of Benj. E. 


134 


V 


White, William H. 


58 


II 


Vosseler, Marx 


196 


VII 


Whitehead, Horatio 


203 


VII 








Whitehead, William W. 


58 


IV 


Waite, James N. 


191 


VI 


Whitehouse, Abraham P. 


30 


IV 


Wakefield, Walter L. 


11 


III 


Whitman, Est. of Henry A. 21 


XI 


Waldo, Loren P. 


26 


IV 


Whitmore, Dexter 


27 


VI 


Walker, Robert 


114 


VI 


Whitmore, Franklin G. 


1 


VII 


Walkley, Warren 


79 


IV 


Whitmore, Jabez H. 


15 


III 



56 



CEDAR HILL CEMETERY 



Whittlesey, Alice G. 
Whittlesey, Edgar G. 
Whittlesey, Frank H. 
Wickham, Horace J. 
Wiers, Nellie 
Wilcox, Lucien S. 
Wilder, Julius L. 
Wilkins, Gouverneur M. 
Willard, William 
Willard, William A. 
Williams, Aaron W. C. 
Williams, Alfred H. 
Williams, Charles S. 
Williams, Ebenezer B. 
Williams, Eliza 
Williams, George W. 
Williams, William S. 
Willis, George H. 
Wilson, Catherine 
Wilson, Frank B. 
Wilson, George C. 
Wilson, Janet S. 
Wilson, Robert C. 
Windsor, Harriet 
Wing, William H. 
Wing, Yung 
Wiuship, Chauncey H. 
Winship, William L. 
Winslow, Charlotte 
Winter, Charles J. 



Lot 


Section 


103 


V 


103 


V 


176 


V 


45 


V 


173 


V 


4 


XII 


20 


VI 


87 


III 


25 


I 


78 


IV 


19 


II 


45 


VI 


106 


IV 


214 


VI 


157 


VI 


106 


IV 


7 


XII 


181 


VII 


180 


VII 


177 


VI 


230 


VII 


167 


VI 


167 


VI 


10 


XI 


62 


IV 


6 


X 


95 


VI 


69 


III 


49 


V 


64 


V 



Lot Section 

Wood, William H. 78 VI 

Woodbridge, John W. 177 VI 

Woodhouse, Levi 23 VI 

Woodhouse, Jane E. 175 VI 

Woodruff, Martha S. 188 V 

Woodruff, William N. 117 V 

Woodward, Joseph G. 36 I 

Woodward, Wellington J. 76 IV 

Woolley, George H. 96 I 

Woolley, George W. 96 I 

Woolley, William P. 131 VI 

Woolley, William S. 189 VI 

Work, Thomas K. 15 III 

Work, Thompson J. 91 VI 

Worthington, Alfred D. 17 XI 

Wright, Charles E. 215 VI 

Wright, Ellen S. 76 VI 

Wright, Frances M. 39 II 

Wright, George A. 148 VI 

Wright, Joseph 47 V 

Wright, William L. 76 VI 

Wright, Heirs of Wm. L. 14 IV 

Yergason, Edgar S. 74 III 

Young, C. Howard 67 VII 

Young, C. Howard 68 VII 

Young, William F. 124 VII 

Youngblood, William 235 VI 

Zweygartt, Henry J. 36 III 



INDEX 



Officers, . 

Historical and Descriptive Sketch, 

Northam Memorial Chapel, 

Gallup Memorial Gateway, 

Chronological List of Officers, 

Act of Incorporation, 

By-Laws, 

Rules and Regulations, 

Explanations, 

Form of Deed, 

Form of Bequest, . 

Form of Order to Open Grave, 

Form of Work Order, 

List of Lot Owners, 



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